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| You are in: Museum of History >> Hall of North and South Americans >> Albert Pinkham Ryder | |
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RYDER, Albert Pinkham, artist, born in New Bedford, Massachusetts, 19 March, 1847. He studied art under William E. Marshall and at the Academy of design, where he began to exhibit in 1878. In 1877, 1882, and 1887 he went abroad, visiting London and Paris, and travelling in Holland, Italy, Spain, and Germany. His paintings are notable rather for color and effect than for form, and he might be classed as a representative of the impressionist school in this country. Among his works are "Wandering Cow," "Curfew Hour," "Pegasus," "Farm-Yard," "The Waste of Waters is their Field" (1884), "Little Maid of Arcady" (1886), " Temple of the Mind," and "Phantom Ship."

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