- Source: George Pearse Ennis
George Pearse Ennis (July 21, 1884 – August 1936) was an American artist. He is known for his watercolors and for the stained glass window he designed for Washington Hall, the cadet mess hall at West Point.
Life
Ennis studied at Washington University in St. Louis and at the Chase School. He was a member of the Federal Art Project. He worked in New York City, and, after the 1920s, in Eastport, Maine. Ennis died following an automobile crash near Utica, New York in 1936.
His work is held by the Art Institute of Chicago.
Ennis also taught; among his pupils was Susan Brown Chase and Earl Bailly.
Works
Ennis, George Pearse (1943) [1933]. Making a water-colour. How to do it Series. London: Studio Publications. OCLC 560101379.
Summers, Charles, George Pearse Ennis (1903). The nomads : a socio-economic novel. St. Louis, Mo.: Cosmos Pub. Co. OCLC 12529582.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
See also
Paul L. Gill
References
External links
George Pearse Ennis at Askart
River View, ca. 1922 Archived May 16, 2012, at the Wayback Machine, pencil drawing
George Pearse Ennis watercolors held by the Art Institute of Chicago
George Pearse Ennis works at Artfact
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- George Pearse Ennis
- Eastport, Maine
- Federal Art Project
- List of Washington University alumni
- William Merritt Chase
- Paul L. Gill
- Roderick Fletcher Mead
- Revington Arthur
- Grand Central School of Art
- Earl Bailly