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John F. Francis

Still Life, Apples and Chestnuts Print by John F Francis

Still Life, Apples and Chestnuts

Still Life. Yellow Apples and Chestnuts spilling from a Basket Print by John F Francis

Still Life. Yellow Apples and Chestnuts spilling from a Basket

Still life with white compote Print by John F Francis

Still life with white compote

A Still life with Pineapple Oranges and Nuts Print by John F Francis

A Still life with Pineapple Oranges and Nuts

The Dessert Print by John F Francis

The Dessert

Still Life with Wine and Fruit Print by John F Francis

Still Life with Wine and Fruit

Apples and Chestnuts Print by John F Francis

Apples and Chestnuts

Luncheon Still Life Print by John F Francis

Luncheon Still Life

John F. Francis (Philadelphia, August 13, 1808 – Jeffersonville, November 15, 1886) was an American painter, primarily of still lifes.

He was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Predominantly self-taught as an artist, he worked until 1845 as a portrait painter in central and eastern Pennsylvania. Francis's portraits reveal his early fascination with minute detail. In 1845, Francis began exhibiting his works at the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts and the Philadelphia Art Union, which promoted American artists by awarding paintings to subscribers using lottery-like drawings. It was in this period that he began to concentrate on still lifes, which had been established as a popular genre in Philadelphia by Raphaelle Peale and other painters. His first known still life is dated 1850, and by 1854 he had ceased to paint anything else. Francis became known as a leading practitioner of luncheon and dessert still life paintings,[1] developing an intricate vocabulary of forms required by his specialized subject. William H. Gerdts writes: "Of all the mid-century still-life specialists, Francis was the most painterly. There is often a freshness and a brio to his paint application that successfully balance his sure delineation of form and his establishment of texture."

Nearly all of his paintings depict fruits and desserts.[2] He painted many replicas of his works, and his style underwent little change over the course of his career.[1] According to art historian Alfred Frankenstein, "his blond, high-keyed palette always provides one of the most distinctive accents in a general exhibition of American still life".[2] Few of his paintings can be dated after 1872 and none after 1880.[1] He was for the most part forgotten by the time of his death in 1886.

In 2013 a pair of his still lifes was appraised at $100,000.[3]
Notes

http://www.butlerart.com/pc_book/pages/john%20FRANCIS.htm
Frankenstein 1970, p. 42.

"Antiques Roadshow -- Season 17". Retrieved 2014-09-08.

References

Frankenstein, Alfred (1970). The Reality of Appearance. Greenwich: New York Graphic Society. ISBN 0- 8212-0357-6
Gerdts, William H. (1981). "Painters of the Humble Truth"
Antiques Roadshow -- Season 17

External links

American paintings & historical prints from the Middendorf collection, an exhibition catalog from The Metropolitan Museum of Art (fully available online as PDF), which contains material on Francis (no. 20)

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