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- catalog abstract "Publisher Fact Sheet. This full-color book discusses art, artists, & movements from the first Europeans in Florida through the World War II era. Annotation. This authoritative and wide-ranging book presents for the first time the history of art in Florida from the first European artist, Jacques Le Moyne de Morgues, who arrived in 1564, until the end of the Second World War, when art in Florida exploded into the modern forms and styles. The early chapters document the artistic offerings of early explorers and naturalists like Mark Catesby and John James Audubon, as well as the Seminole Indians and those who painted them, including George Catlin and Charles Bird King. St. Augustine, the first permanent settlement, also came to be the first center of art in Florida. After the Civil War, when Northerners began to flock to Florida for health and pleasure, art found a place in the thriving business of travel literature. This drew artists like brothers Edward and Thomas Moran, who began to paint the beauty of Florida. In the 1880s, St. Augustine, through the efforts of Henry Morrison Flagler, again became the center of artistic endeavor, attracting artists like Martin Johnson Heade. At the end of the century many prominent American artists arrived and painted the Florida they found. This included Frederic Remington, George Inness, Hermann Herzog, and Winslow Homer. In the first half of the twentieth century, Florida paintings were created by such notables as John Singer Sargent, Jane Peterson, Martha Walter, Milton Avery, William Glackens, Ernest Lawson, Harold Betts, Frank Weston Benson, Ralston Crawford, Andrew Wyeth, and Milton Avery. The final chapter covers government-sponsored art in the 1930s, including murals in public buildings and the Index of American Design. Collected here are 160 illustrations of Florida art, 100 in color. The illustrated paintings were gathered from public and private collections all over the country, many reproduced here for the first time.".
- catalog contributor b11492791.
- catalog coverage "Florida In art.".
- catalog created "c1999.".
- catalog date "1999".
- catalog date "c1999.".
- catalog dateCopyrighted "c1999.".
- catalog description "Acknowledgments -- Preface -- Introduction: origins -- Early visitors -- The early nineteenth century -- The Seminoles -- Statehood and development -- After the civil ear -- Cultural growth 1880-1900 -- Travel tracts of the late 1800s -- Some notable painters -- The twentieth century until 1945 -- Government-sponsored art in the 1930s -- Artists -- Notes -- Selected bibliography -- Index.".
- catalog description "Includes bibliographical references (p. 183-185) and index.".
- catalog description "Publisher Fact Sheet. This full-color book discusses art, artists, & movements from the first Europeans in Florida through the World War II era. Annotation. This authoritative and wide-ranging book presents for the first time the history of art in Florida from the first European artist, Jacques Le Moyne de Morgues, who arrived in 1564, until the end of the Second World War, when art in Florida exploded into the modern forms and styles. The early chapters document the artistic offerings of early explorers and naturalists like Mark Catesby and John James Audubon, as well as the Seminole Indians and those who painted them, including George Catlin and Charles Bird King. St. Augustine, the first permanent settlement, also came to be the first center of art in Florida. After the Civil War, when Northerners began to flock to Florida for health and pleasure, art found a place in the thriving business of travel literature. This drew artists like brothers Edward and Thomas Moran, who began to paint the beauty of Florida. In the 1880s, St. Augustine, through the efforts of Henry Morrison Flagler, again became the center of artistic endeavor, attracting artists like Martin Johnson Heade. At the end of the century many prominent American artists arrived and painted the Florida they found. This included Frederic Remington, George Inness, Hermann Herzog, and Winslow Homer. In the first half of the twentieth century, Florida paintings were created by such notables as John Singer Sargent, Jane Peterson, Martha Walter, Milton Avery, William Glackens, Ernest Lawson, Harold Betts, Frank Weston Benson, Ralston Crawford, Andrew Wyeth, and Milton Avery.".
- catalog description "The final chapter covers government-sponsored art in the 1930s, including murals in public buildings and the Index of American Design. Collected here are 160 illustrations of Florida art, 100 in color. The illustrated paintings were gathered from public and private collections all over the country, many reproduced here for the first time.".
- catalog extent "ix, 191 p. :".
- catalog hasFormat "Art in Florida.".
- catalog identifier "1561641715".
- catalog isFormatOf "Art in Florida.".
- catalog issued "1999".
- catalog issued "c1999.".
- catalog language "eng".
- catalog publisher "Sarasota, Fla. : Pineapple Press,".
- catalog relation "Art in Florida.".
- catalog spatial "Florida In art.".
- catalog spatial "Florida.".
- catalog subject "709/.759 21".
- catalog subject "Art, American Florida.".
- catalog subject "N6530.F6 M36 1999".
- catalog tableOfContents "Acknowledgments -- Preface -- Introduction: origins -- Early visitors -- The early nineteenth century -- The Seminoles -- Statehood and development -- After the civil ear -- Cultural growth 1880-1900 -- Travel tracts of the late 1800s -- Some notable painters -- The twentieth century until 1945 -- Government-sponsored art in the 1930s -- Artists -- Notes -- Selected bibliography -- Index.".
- catalog title "Art in Florida : 1564-1945 / by Maybelle Mann.".
- catalog type "Art. fast".
- catalog type "text".