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Artist Biographies

Edward M. Bannister

1828 - 1901

Edward M. BannisterWithin the past two decades there has been renewed interest in E.M. Bannister’s artistic achievement in not only Rhode Island art, but in American art as well. After careful examination by art historians, he is recognized today as one of the important black artists of the 19th century.

Bannister was motivated to paint after reading a 1867 New York Herald Article that claimed, “while the (black) may harbor an appreciation of art, he is unable to prove it.” With this challenge, his career as an artist began.

He chose to specialize in landscape painting, and eventually excelled in this field, heavily influenced by the Barbizon mood popular at the time. Subdued but warm color, a generalized conception of form, and deep shadows characterize most of his paintings and reflect his sensitive and modest character.

Born in Nova Scotia, Canada, Bannister came to Providence in 1870 after receiving art training at Boston’s Lowell Institute in the mid-1860’s. There he studied anatomy with the artist and physician, William Rimmer. In his Providence Studio he painted portraits, religious and genre subjects, sea and landscapes. It was in 1876, at the Philadelphia Centennial Exhibition, that he rose to national prominence, winning the first place bronze medal for his painting “Under the Oaks”, becoming the first Afro-American to win a national art award. Bannister continued to earn honors including two silver and one bronze medal at the Massachusetts Charitable Mechanic Association Art Shows. In addition to these artistic achievements, Bannister was instrumental in the founding of the Providence Art Club.

Today Bannister’s work is particularly important because it represents the climate of Providence painting at the moment when the community decided to actively engage in the promotion of art. As an American Black, Bannister was a pioneer, achieving recognition in a field where none had practiced before. His works can be seen at the Museum of African Art and the Museum of American Art in Washington, Harvard Medical Association in Massachusetts, and at the Rhode Island Historical Society, Rhode Island School of Design Museum of Art, and the Providence Art Club.

(picture from askart.com)

  • Grace Albee 1890 - 1985 *
  • Percy Albee 1883 - 1969
  • Edward M. Bannister 1828 - 1901
  • Elijah Baxter 1828 - 1901
  • Anna R. Brewster 1870-1952
  • Sydney Burleigh 1853-1931
  • Henry Newell Cady 1849-1935
  • Samuel Roscoe Chaffee 1850 – 1913
  • Antonio Cirino 1888 - 1983
  • Edgar Corbridge 1901-1988
  • F. Usher DeVoll 1873 - 1941
  • William Staples Drown - 1856 - 1915
  • H.A. Dyer 1872 - 1943 *
  • H. Cyrus Farnum 1866-1926
  • Walter Feldman 1925-2017
  • Ruth Forrest 1919-1994
  • John Frazier 1889 - 1966
  • Eliza Gardiner 1871 - 1955
  • Rebecca Russel Greene - 1879 - 1953
  • Mary Helme Hale - 1862-1940
  • James Herbert 1898 - 1970
  • George Hitchcock 1850 - 1913
  • Margarete Koehler-Bittkow (1897-1964)
  • E.C. Leavitt 1842-1904
  • Florence Leif 1913 - 1968 *
  • Steven W. Macomber 1889-1983
  • Edna Martin 1896-1996
  • Frank C. Mathewson 1861 - 1941
  • Maxwell Mays 1918 - 2009
  • Angela O'Leary 1879-1921
  • Gordon Peers 1909 - 1988
  • Henri Schonhardt 1875 – 1953
  • Charles Stetson 1858-1911
  • Emma Swan 1853 - 1927
  • George Whitaker 1840 - 1916
  • Mabel May Woodward, 1877 - 1945

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Providence, RI 02903
(401) 751-2628
info@bertgallery.com

Mailing Address: 24 Corliss Street, #6939
Providence, RI 02940
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