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| (c.1867-1898) |
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Medium/Discipline: Painting
Birthplace: Baltimore, Maryland
Place of Death: Elmira, New York?
Maryland Affiliation: Born here
Prominent Theme: Genre
Subject Headings: Chalon, Rosalie Lorraine, Comptesse de
Gender: Female
Race/Ethnicity: White
Biography: Rosalie Gill was one of many women encouraged after the Civil War to become an artist. Born in Baltimore and trained in New York at the Art Students League under major American painter William Merritt Chase, this woman artist painted with loose brushwork in the tradition of late 19th-Century American artists. Her artwork features a palette similar to the rich browns, reds, golds and greens that Chase used. A work held by The Baltimore Museum of Art shows Gill's handling of a subject popular among artists and the public during the last quarter of the 19th-C: The New Model, depicts a woman unsure about the duties that will be expected of her, in an artist's studio (no doubt that of William Merritt Chase); Gill painted this artwork at about the age of 17.
Education/Training: Art Students League, New York City
Taught By: William Merritt Chase
Selected References: Dean, Mary A. [et al.] 350 Years of Art & Architecture in Maryland (College Park : Art Gallery, and Gallery of the School of Architecture, University of Maryland), 1984.
Maryland Institutions Holding Artworks: Baltimore Museum of Art (watercolor), Peabody Art Collection (Maryland State Archives)
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