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Artist Biographies

Frank C. Mathewson

1861 - 1941

Frank C. MathewsonIn present day, Frank Mathewson has become one of the most obscure important early artists of the Providence Art Club. Upon reviewing his life story, one discovers a very talented, well trained and respected artist in his time.

Frank Mathewson’s love for the arts was cultivated by his mother who was a painter and singer. It was only after a dismal failure in business that his career choice in art became clear. In 1888, with the financial support of his family, he began seriously studying art. He began his study in the evening class at the Rhode Island School of Design when it was located in the Hoppin Homestead Building. He attended the Lowell School of Practical Design, the National School of Decorative Art and the Ecole De Beaux Arts. He studied while in Europe under Mosler and Paul Laurens.

Mathewson painted in water colors and oils. Both were dominated by his love for color and he continuously demonstrated in the steady succession of works in his lifetime that color meant more to him than anything else. The subjects which interested him most were landscapes and flowers. He painted them with sincerity and clarity of vision and it was a Providence Journal Art critic who identified in Mathewson's landscapes that “the chief element of his strength was a striking capacity for catching distance.”

Throughout his career Mathewson maintained that he never was influenced markedly by any movement. Rather he remarked of his philosophy toward painting “better to be true to yourself and paint as you know you ought to paint a thing, eliminating, adapting but never losing sight of the plain face of nature which in the long run shall suffice the sons of man.”

Mathewson split his career between Providence and New York. He accumulated prizes and credentials which made him an important figure in the Rhode Island and New York art world. He won the Rhode Island School of Design Sullivan Prize in 1903 and the Providence Art Club's Member’s Prize in 1933. He founded the South County Art Club and was a member of the New York Water Color Club,Chicago Water Color Club, North Shore Arts Association of Glocester, South County Art Association, Salmagundi Club, American Water Color Society, Providence Art Club and Internationale Societe D'Aquarellistes.

  • 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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24 Bridge Street
Providence, RI 02903
(401) 751-2628
info@bertgallery.com

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