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Benjamin West
(b. Oct. 10, 1738, near Springfield, Pa., U.S.--d. March 11, 1820,)
(b. Oct. 10, 1738, near Springfield, Pa., U.S. d. March 11, 1820,
London, Eng.)
American-born painter of
historical, religious, and mythological subjects who had a profound
influence on the development of historical painting in Britain. He was
historical painter to George III (1772-1801), a founder of the Royal
Academy (1768), and in 1792 he succeeded Sir Joshua Reynolds as its
president.
[Encyclopaedia Britannica, 1994]
Thanks to Carol Gerten-Jackson's
help in this section.
West, Benjamin
(1738-1820). One of the first American artists to win a wide
reputation in Europe, Benjamin West exerted considerable influence on the
development of art in the United States through such young American painters
as Gilbert Stuart, Charles Willson Peale, and
John Singleton Copley.
West abandoned the tradition of painting people in Greek and Roman dress, the
first major artist working in England to do so.
West was born on Oct. 10, 1738, of Quaker parents in Springfield (now
Swarthmore) in the Pennsylvania colony. Young West was encouraged to draw,
and it was said that he got his first paints from his Indian friends. When he
was 16 his Quaker community approved art training for him. For a time West
studied in Philadelphia and New York City. He also served as a militia
captain in Indian campaigns in Pennsylvania. Then he went to Italy for three
years of study. In 1763 he went to England and remained there for life.
Known in London as "the American
Raphael,
he became a friend of Sir
Joshua Reynolds, England's leading painter. Soon other influential Londoners,
Samuel Johnson for one, took an interest in the young American. King George
III commissioned him to paint several pictures, and in 1772 he appointed West
historical painter to the king with an annual allowance of 1,000 pounds. By
another royal appointment West was made a charter member of the Royal
Academy, succeeding Reynolds as president in 1792.
West painted historical and religious subjects on huge canvases. Among his
famous works are
Agrippina Landing at Brundisium with the Ashes of Germanicus (1768);
The Death of General Wolfe
(1771), the controversial
painting in which he broke away from classical costumes;
Penn's Treaty with the Indians (1772); and
Death on a Pale Horse (1817),
which anticipated
developments in French
romantic
painting. Modern critics regard West's
figures as somewhat stiff, his colors harsh, and his themes uninspired, but
they respect his leadership and influence on later artists. West died on
March 11, 1820, in London.
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