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Here are all the paintings of Thomas Nast 01
ID |
Painting |
Oil Pantings, Sorted from A to Z |
Painting Description |
49359 |
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Entrance of the 55th Massachusetts Regiment into Charleston |
mk195
1865
Pencil neutral wash and oil,heightened with white on board
14x21
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49271 |
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Ladies- Parlor at Willard-s Hotel |
mk195
Washington
March 6
1861
Pencil and wash
9x14
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49219 |
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The Departure of the Seventh Regiment to the War |
mk195
April 19.1861.
1969
Oil on canvas
66x96 |
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Thomas Nast
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September 27, 1840 ?C December 7, 1902,Illustrator Thomas Nast was the first American celebrity cartoonist, famous for helping to turn out New York corrupt politicians and for creating peristent iconographic images of Santa Claus. Nast, from a family of German immigrants, began working in New York City as a cartoonist at the age of 15. He had a long association with Harper Weekly (1861-86), during which his battlefield illustrations and skilled caricatures made him famous in the U.S. and abroad (Van Gogh was a collector). Nast was an opinionated, progressive Republican, and his illustrated attacks on the leader of New York Democrats, William Boss Tweed, are said to have helped bring down an era of government corruption. One of the most influential caricaturists of his time, he is credited with creating the image of Santa as a chubby fellow in a red suit. Nast also came up with the image of an ass to represent Democrats (around 1870) and an elephant to represent Republicans (1874). His popularity waned in the 1880s, and he parted ways with Harper Weekly over political and artistic differences. Failing to succeed with his own publication or as a painter, he managed to be appointed by President Teddy Roosevelt in 1902 to a diplomatic position in Ecuador, where he contracted yellow fever and died. Now officially embraced icons, the animal symbols of the two political parties were meant by Nast to be unflattering.
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