William Sidney Mount was born on November 26, 1807 in Setauket. He apprenticed as a sign painter to his brother, Henry Mount in New York City. In 1826, when the National Academy of Design opened drawing classes, Mount was one of its first students and was elected an associate member in 1831
In his early years, Mount primarily painted works with
historical and literary themes. In 1829, the artist began to paint
portraits and scenes from everyday life, or genre paintings. Mount’s
scenes of rural life immediately became popular, both in the United States and
abroad. His paintings often commented on American social and political
issues. By the middle of the nineteenth
century, he was one of the most renowned artists in America, with more commissions
than he could fulfill. He sketched extensively in notebooks and painted
plein-air oil sketches for several works, devising a studio-wagon in which he
travelled over Long Island.
He played the violin and in fact produced his own type
own fiddle for which he also acquired the copyright. He named it ‘Cradle
of Harmony’. It produced a louder sound than that of an ordinary fiddle.
Mount never married, and died in Setauket on November
18, 1868.
Sources:
“William Sidney Mount.” Artist
Info, https://www.nga.gov/collection/artist-info.1741.html
“William Sidney Mount.” Encyclopædia Britannica,
Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc., https://www.britannica.com/biography/William-Sidney-Mount
“William Sidney Mount -
Biography: American Artist.” Victorian Era,
http://victorian-era.org/william-sidney-mount-biography.html
“William Sidney Mount:
American Genre-Painter / Lim.” Art & Architecture Quarterly, 19 Feb.
2018, https://aaqeastend.com/contents/william-sydney-mount-american-genre-painter
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