1868 in art explained
Events from the year 1868 in art.
Events
Works
Births
- April 6 – Helen Hyde, American etcher and engraver (died 1919)
- April 12 – Ella Gaunt Smith, American doll-maker (died 1932)
- April 21 – Alfred Henry Maurer, American modernist painter (suicide 1932)
- April 28 – Émile Bernard, French Post-Impressionist painter (died 1941)
- June 5 – Johan Thorn Prikker, Dutch art nouveau painter and stained-glass artist (died 1932)
- June 18 – Georges Lacombe, French sculptor and painter (died 1916)
- July 16 – Willy Gretor, born Vilhelm Petersen, Danish-born painter and art dealer (died 1923)
- October 8
- November 11 – Édouard Vuillard, French painter (died 1940)
- November 23 – Mary Brewster Hazelton, American portrait painter (died 1953)
Deaths
- January 15 – Lucie Ingemann, Danish religious painter (born 1792)
- January 28 – Adalbert Stifter, Austrian writer, poet, painter, and pedagogue (born 1805)
- February 14 – Emil Bærentzen, Danish portrait painter and lithographer (born 1799)
- February 21 – Giuseppe Abbati, Italian painter (born 1836)
- February 26 – Georg Heinrich Busse, German landscape painter and engraver (born 1810)
- March – John Burnet, Scottish engraver and painter (born 1781/1784)
- March 10 – Herman Wilhelm Bissen, Danish sculptor (born 1798)
- March 29 – Felix Slade, English lawyer, art collector and founder of the Slade School of Art (born 1788)
- May 2 – James Wilson Carmichael, English marine painter (born 1800)
- May 24 – Emanuel Leutze, German American painter (born 1816)
- August 10
- September 13 – Richard Rothwell, Irish portrait and genre painter (born 1800)
- September 13 – Angélique Mezzara, French portrait painter and miniaturist (born 1793)
- September 27 – August Piepenhagen, German painter active in Bohemia (born 1791)
- October 10 – François-Édouard Picot, French historic painter (born 1786)
- November 23
- December 1 – John Edward Carew, Irish sculptor (born c. 1782)
- date unknown
Notes and References
- Web site: Why Born Enslaved! by Jean-Baptiste Carpeaux . Metropolitan Museum of Art.