Oil Painting George
Oil Painting George

George Catlin - Painter of American Indians
George Catlin (July 26, 1796 – December 23, 1872) was an American artist and author who travelled the Wild West and painted Native Americans. His paintings and books recorded their appearance, customs and culture.
Catlin was born in Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania, the fifth of fourteen brothers and sisters. His father was a lawyer who wanted his son to follow in his footsteps, and in 1817 sent him to study law in Litchfield, Connecticut. But Catlin was more interested in art than law and, after practicing for a couple of years moved to Philadelphia where he began painting portraits. Catlin never formally studied art; he was entirely self-taught but still won commissions, including a request to paint the portrait of Governor DeWitt Clinton of Albany, N.Y.. It was on one of his visits to the Governor’s mansion he met his future wife, Clara Bartlett Gregory. The couple were married in 1828 and had three daughters and a son.
In 1830 Catlin set out on his great quest to record the Native American way of life. For the next eight years he traveled up the Mississippi and Missouri rivers and painted Native American tribes at the borders of the great frontier. Painting under harsh conditions, his portraits faithfully recorded the rituals, dress, dances and hunting skills of tribes like the Sioux, Cree, Omaha, Blackfeet and Pawnee. His renderings were so faithful that ornaments, beads and headdresses worn by his subjects were reproduced down to the smallest detail. He took written notes and made frequent sketches. By the end of this first journey, he had produced 520 oil paintings and had amassed an important collection of Native American artifacts.
Catlin returned to the east coast in 1837 where he gathered together his paintings, sketches, artifacts and costumes into a traveling show he called his “Indian Gallery”. He took the show to New York, Cincinnati and Pittsburgh, giving lectures and telling stories of his life among the Indian tribes. He also went to Washington where he hoped to sell the Indian Gallery to the United States government; his life’s ambition was to have the works become part of a museum collection. But Congress did not approve the purchase and the exhibition did not do well in Boston and Philadelphia. The second show in New York also had poor attendance.
Following these disappointments, Catlin decided to take the Indian Gallery to Europe and in 1839 set sail for England. The exhibition opened in London in 1840 with much publicity. Catlin gave lectures and demonstrations of Native American hunting practices. In addition to the splendid portraits, visitors to the exhibition could view weapons and costumes – there were even live performances by Native American dancers. The show was a huge success and Catlin’s family came over to join him in London. In 1845, Catlin took the Indian Gallery to Paris, where his wife and son both died.
Catlin stayed on in Europe after his wife’s death, living there until 1852 when bankruptcy forced him to hand over the Indian Gallery to Joseph Harrison, a Philadelphia businessman. Harrison stored the works in his factory in Philadelphia and Catlin spent the next 20 years trying to recreate the Indian Gallery from his notes and sketches.
Following his bankruptcy, Catlin went back to his roots, returning to the USA and traveling to South America where he spent the next six years traveling and painting the Indian peoples. He traveled up America’s Pacific coast all the way up to Alaska. In 1860 Catlin returned to Brussels, Belgium, where he lived for ten years before returning to New York in 1870 where he died in 1872. After his death, Joseph Harrison’s widow donated the Indian Gallery to the Smithsonian Institution.
You can find a wide collection of George Catlin paint by number patterns at the Segmation web site. These patterns may be viewed, painted, and printed using SegPlay™PC a fun, computerized paint-by-numbers program for Windows 2000, XP, and Vista.
About the Author
Mark Feldman is President of
SegTech, a company devoted to a wonderful Image Segmentation technology called Segmation.
Segmation - The Art of Pieceful Imaging
What is this painting?... and Value?...?
I found this painting in a old antique shop in Greenwich, I fell in love with it, so I brought it for £5 I'm pretty sure its worth more than that but I'm not sure, some people have told me its a print and some say its a genuine oil painting/water colour , but I have my doubts, the painting is signed George Hann, the signing isn't 100% clear, it looks like hana but it defiantly looks like George Hann, I'd be very grateful if someone could possibly get a rough valuation on the painting and more details about George Hann and the painting itself,
thank you very much, Jimi
Here is a link to the picture, I'm sorry its in bad quality, with the blue lines etc.. I hope you can identify it.
http://img82.imageshack.us/img82/1706/georgehannfv3.jpg
it might be a print i dont know
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US $3,000.00

























































































