John Greenwood (artist)
John Greenwood Sr. (1727–1792) was an early American portrait painter, engraver and auctioneer.
John Greenwood Sr. | |
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Mezzotint of Greenwood (cropped), William Pether | |
Born | 7 December 1727 |
Died | 16 September 1792 |
Nationality | American |
Known for | Painter |
Notable work | Sea Captains Carousing in Surinam |
Movement | Realism |
Life
Greenwood was born on 7 December 1727 in Boston, Massachusetts, and baptized on 10 December in the Old North Church, Boston.
His father died insolvent in 1742 and at about this time Greenwood apprenticed to Thomas Johnston, a Boston line engraver, sign painter, and japanner. According to his son's later account, Greenwood soon left Johnston's studio in order to pursue portraiture.[1] He left Boston in 1752 and traveled to the Dutch colony of Surinam in northeast South America. He stayed there for over five years, during which time he executed 115 portraits, before traveling again, this time to Europe, arriving in Amsterdam in May 1758. He settled there for a time to learn the art of making mezzotints, and was documented as a member of the Amsterdam Drawing Academy in 1758 by Jacob Otten Husly.[2] After leaving Amsterdam, Greenwood stayed in Paris, then London, where he eventually settled in 1764.
At the request of the Earl of Bute Greenwood made a journey, in July 1771, into Holland and France purchasing paintings; he afterwards visited the continent, buying up the collections of Count van Schulembourg and the Baron Steinberg. In 1776 he was occupying Ford's Rooms in the Haymarket as an art auctioneer.
One of Greenwood's best known works is Sea Captains Carousing in Surinam (1755), a drunken scene featuring various prominent Rhode Island merchants, including Declaration of Independence signatory Stephen Hopkins, Governor Joseph Wanton, Admiral Esek Hopkins, and Governor Nicholas Cooke.
Greenwood died while on a visit to Margate, Kent on 16 September 1792, and is buried there. His wife, who survived him a few years, was buried at Chiswick, close to the tomb of Hogarth.
Family
Greenwood was the son of Samuel Greenwood (1690–1742), a Harvard graduate (1709) and merchant, and his second wife, Mary Charnock Devereux (c. 1709-1794).[3] In 1770, Greenwood wrote to his childhood friend, the painter John Singleton Copley, to commission a portrait of his mother Mary Charnock Devereux: ‘I am very desirous of seeing the good lady’s face as she now appears, with old age creeping upon her.’ this portrait is now part of the international painting collection at the Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa.[4] His eldest son, Charnock-Gladwin, died an officer in the army at Grenada, West Indies; the second, John, succeeded him in business; James returned to Boston; and the youngest, Captain Samuel Adam Greenwood, senior-assistant at the residency of Baroda, died at Cambray in 1810. His son John Greenwood, Jr. (1772–1815) is the subject of a portrait by William Beechey.[5]
A small half-length portrait of Greenwood in mezzotint, by William Pether, bearing an artist's pallet and brushes and an auctioneer's mallet, was afterwards published. A three-quarter length, by Lemuel Francis Abbott, and a miniature by Henry Edridge, which were in possession of his grandson, John Danforth Greenwood, ex-principal of Nelson College, New Zealand.
- Mrs Devereux was the second wife of Samuel Greenwood and mother of John Greenwood; John S Copley 1770
- Portrait of Greenwoods son John Greenwood, Jr. by William Beechey circa 1795
- The Greenwood-Lee Family including a self-portrait of the artist circa 1747
Greenwood's great great granddaughter is the New Zealand photographer Elizabeth Greenwood (1873–1961).
Selected works
- Sea Captains Carousing in Surina (1755)
- Portrait of Richard Waldron (1751)
- Portrait of Mrs. Richard Waldron (1751)
- Portret van een officier ter zee met een kustkaart en een verrekijker in de hand (1760)
- Portrait of Thomas Westbrook Waldron (1750)
- Portrait of Mrs. Mary Fitch Cabot (circa 1745-1752)
- John Richard Comyns of Hylands, Essex, with His Daughters (1775)
- The seven sisters of Tottenham (1790)
- Mrs. Henry Bromfield (Margaret Fayerweather) (1749)
- Portrait of Mrs. John Greenleaf (1749)
- Portrait of Henry Flynt (between circa 1749 and circa 1750)
References
- Harvard Art Museums; Stebbins, Theodore E; Renn, Melissa (2014). American Paintings at Harvard: Volume 1: Paintings, Watercolors, and Pastels by Artists Born Before 1826. New Haven: Yale University Press.
- Biography of John Greenwood in Roeland van Eynden and Adriaan van der Willigen's Geschiedenis der Vaderlandsche Schilderkunst, 1840, Vol. II, p. 202 (reprint 1979)
- "ODNB Greenwood, John (1727–1792)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/11438. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
- https://collections.tepapa.govt.nz/object/41241
- https://collections.tepapa.govt.nz/object/37017
This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: "Greenwood, John (1727-1792)". Dictionary of National Biography. London: Smith, Elder & Co. 1885–1900.
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to John Greenwood. |
- "A History of the Rise and Progress of the Arts of Design in the United States" By William Dunlap, Frank William Bayley, Charles Eliot Goodspeed (Boston: 1918 C.E. Goodspeed)
- John Singleton Copley in America, a full text exhibition catalog from The Metropolitan Museum of Art, which contains material on John Greenwood (see index)