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The Philadelphia Art Alliance officially merged and was acquired by the University of the Arts in 2018, after unanimous approval from the boards of both institutions in 2017, [26] [2] and became known as The Philadelphia Art Alliance at University of the Arts. Although the University officially closed on June 7, 2024 the organizers of an ...
Born in the small town of Cerro Gordo near Decatur, Illinois, to John L. Kuns and Maria Dilling Kuns, Fern Coppedge spent much of her life in Pennsylvania where she was associated with the New Hope School of American Impressionism, the Fellowship of the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts, and the Philadelphia Art Alliance, and what became known as the Pennsylvania Impressionism movement.
Christine Wetherill Stevenson (April 12, 1878 – November 21, 1922) was an heiress of the Pittsburgh Paint Company [1] and founder of the Philadelphia Art Alliance. [2]She helped fund the Daisy Dell which became the Hollywood Bowl, in the Hollywood Hills neighborhood of Los Angeles, California.
Examples of Maurice Molarsky's paintings are held by the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts [32] the Athenaeum of Philadelphia, [33] the Penn Art collection at the University of Pennsylvania, [34] the Woodmere Art Museum [35] and the Princeton University Art Museum [36] Portrait of Howard W. Lewis, c. 1936 (The Atheneum of Philadelphia)
Mary Louise Curtis (August 6, 1876 in Boston, Massachusetts – January 4, 1970 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania) [1] [2] was the founder of the Curtis Institute of Music in Philadelphia. She was the only child of the magazine and newspaper magnate Cyrus H. K. Curtis and Louisa Knapp Curtis , the founder and editor of the Ladies' Home Journal .
Walter Emerson Baum (December 14, 1884 – July 12, 1956) was an American visual artist and educator, active in the Bucks and Lehigh County areas of Pennsylvania.In addition to being a prolific painter, Baum was also responsible for the founding of the Baum School of Art, and the Allentown Art Museum.
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Wagner was a member of the Philadelphia Art Alliance for many years and had shows devoted to his work there before and after he died. [8] In the summers between 1903 and 1913, Wagner lived in Island Heights, New Jersey where James Moore Bryant supported him. Bryant was an engraver Wagner had met at the Philadelphia Sketch Club. [9]