peoplepill id: charles-deas
CD
United States of America
2 views today
10 views this week
Charles Deas
American painter

Charles Deas

The basics

Quick Facts

Intro
American painter
Work field
Gender
Male
Place of birth
Philadelphia, Philadelphia County, Pennsylvania, USA
Place of death
New York City, New York, USA
Age
48 years
Family
Mother:
Ann Izard Deas
The details (from wikipedia)

Biography

Charles Deas (December 22, 1818 – March 23, 1867) was an American painter noted for his oil paintings of Native Americans and fur trappers of the mid-19th century.

Biography

Charles Deas was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. He attempted, and failed, to obtain an appointment to the United States Military Academy at West Point, New York. As a young man, he studied under John Sanderson in Philadelphia, and subsequently embarked upon a career as a painter. The National Academy of Design in New York soon recognized his work, electing him as an associate member in 1839.

By 1840, he had decided to emulate one of his influences, George Catlin, and travel westward in the United States. It was during travels through the Wisconsin Territory that he became a noted painter of trappers and American Indians. By 1841, Deas decided to establish his base in St. Louis, Missouri. During this time, Deas would typically spend "a few months among the Indian tribes, familiarizing himself with their manners and customs."

The artist's works are described as expressing "psychological tension, perceived danger, alarm, and flight," epitomized by his painting Death Struggle which depicts an Indian and trapper locked in combat while falling to their deaths from a cliff.

Deas was most famous while he was still alive. One critic, in 1947, stated that the painter was considered to have "enjoyed more of a reputation during his own lifetime" than currently. Between 1841 and 1848, Deas' regularly exhibited his works in St. Louis at the "Mechanics Fairs." He also shipped many of his works, for sale, to the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts as well as to New York's American Art Union. Deas returned to New York in 1848 and expressed a desire to open a gallery of Indian art. Before he could do this he was declared legally insane.

On May 23, 1848, Deas was committed to New York's Bloomingdale Asylum (now occupied by Columbia University). He was institutionalized for the rest of his life. During this period, his paintings were described as being particularly intense. "One of his wild pictures, representing a black sea, over which a figure hung, suspended from a ring, while from the waves a monster was springing, was so horrible, that a sensitive artist fainted at the sight." Deas died of "apoplexy" (possible stroke) in Bloomingdale Asylum on March 23, 1867.

Deas' maternal grandfather was the 18th century American politician Ralph Izard of South Carolina.

Selected works

Wa-kon-cha-hi-re-ga (1840) by Charles Deas
  • Robert Watts, Jr. (1838), oil on canvas, St. Louis Mercantile Library
  • Walking the Chalk (1838), oil on canvas, Houston Museum of Fine Arts
  • Turkey Shooting (1838), oil on canvas, Virginia Museum of Fine Arts
  • Self Portrait (1840), graphite on buff wove paper, National Academy
  • Wa-kon-cha-hi-re-ga (1840), oil on canvas, St. Louis Mercantile Library
  • Winnebago with Peace Medal and Red Pipestone (1840), oil on canvas, St. Louis Mercantile Library
  • Winnebago with Bear-Claw Necklace (1840), oil on canvas, St. Louis Mercantile Library
  • Winnebago with Bear-Claw Necklace and Gun-Stock Club (1840), oil on canvas, St. Louis Mercantile Library
  • Winnebagos Playing Checkers (1842), private collection
  • Devil and Tom Walker, (1843), oil on canvas, private collection
  • Long Jakes (1844), oil on canvas, Denver Art Museum
  • Dragoons Crossing River (1844), private collection
  • The Death Struggle (1845), oil on canvas, Shelburne Museum
  • A Group of Sioux, (1845), oil on canvas, Amon Carter Museum
  • The Trapper and His Family, (1845), Boston Museum of Fine Arts
  • The Voyageurs, (1846), oil on canvas, Boston Museum of Fine Arts
  • Prairie Fire, (1847), oil on canvas, Brooklyn Museum
  • Indian Warrior on the Edge of a Precipice (1847)

Bibliography

The contents of this page are sourced from Wikipedia article. The contents are available under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.
Lists
Charles Deas is in following lists
comments so far.
Comments
From our partners
Sponsored
Credits
References and sources
Charles Deas
arrow-left arrow-right instagram whatsapp myspace quora soundcloud spotify tumblr vk website youtube pandora tunein iheart itunes