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James Edward Buttersworth Oil Painting Print Reproduction "Sailing Vessel

$ 39.6

Availability: 100 in stock
  • Region of Origin: Unknown
  • Listed By: Owner
  • Height (Inches): 25
  • Artist: James Edward Buttersworth
  • Size: Medium (up to 36in.)
  • Width (Inches): 33
  • Features: Matted
  • Color: Multi-Color
  • Medium: Oil
  • Condition: This Picture is in very good condition with only minor dings due to ageing
  • Date of Creation: Unknown
  • Subject: Nautical
  • Style: Vintage
  • Quantity Type: Single-Piece Work
  • All returns accepted: ReturnsNotAccepted
  • Originality: Reproduction
  • Painting Surface: Paper

    Description

    This is a very nice reproduction oil painting print on canvas in antiqued gold resin frame accurately reproduced from original work by James Edward Buttersworth. It measures 33Wx25Hx2W it has saw tooth hook installed on back.  Made in The USA
    James Edward Buttersworth (1817-1894)
    Who is James Edward Buttersworth?
    (b Middlesex, England, 1817; d West Hoboken, NJ, 1894) British/American Painter. Born in England to a family of marine painters, James Buttersworth traveled to New York in 1847 and had settled there permanently by the following year. At the time of Buttersworth's arrival, New York was primarily a maritime city and the largest center of transportation in the nation, affording the artist plenty of subject matter in the clipper ships and steamers that came in and out of the surrounding ports. Over the next few decades, however, as new innovations abounded and the shipping industry was restructured, New York's harbors became markedly less active. Richard B. Grassby writes, "Paradoxically, as American shipping declined and steam edged out sail, interest in recreational sailing boomed. Buttersworth was very much aware of this, and from the 1870s on he focused his attention on yachting, and expression of the ambitions, industry, and competitive pleasures in nineteenth-century America. (Credit: Sotheby’s, New York, American Paintings, Drawings and Sculpture, May 18, 2005