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{{Short description|American painter (1859–1937)}}
{{Use mdy dates|date=February 2012}}
{{Use mdy dates|date=August 2023}}
{{Infobox artist
{{Infobox artist
| name = Henry Ossawa Tanner
| name = Henry Ossawa Tanner
| image = Henry Ossawa Tanner.jpg
| image = Henry Ossawa Tanner.jpg
| caption = Tanner in 1907 by [[Frederick Gutekunst]]
| imagesize = 200px
| caption = Henry Ossawa Tanner in 1907.
| birth_date = {{Birth date|1859|6|21|mf=y}}
| birth_place = [[Pittsburgh]], Pennsylvania, U.S.
| birth_name = Henry Ossawa Tanner
| birth_date = {{Birth date|1859|6|21|mf=y}}
| death_date = {{death date and age|1937|5|25|1859|6|21|mf=y}}
| death_place = Paris, France
| birth_place = [[Pittsburgh]], [[Pennsylvania]]
| field = [[Painting]] and [[drawing]]
| death_date = {{death date and age|1937|5|25|1859|6|21|mf=y}}
| training = Studied with [[Thomas Eakins]] at the [[Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts]]. Later studied with [[Jean Paul Laurens]] and [[Jean-Joseph Benjamin-Constant]] at the [[Académie Julian]] in Paris, France.
| death_place = Paris, France
| movement = [[American Realism]], [[Academic art|French Academic]], [[Impressionism]], [[Symbolism (arts)|Symbolism]]
| nationality = American
| notable_works = {{unbulleted list
| field = [[painting]], [[drawing]]
|''[[The Banjo Lesson]]'', 1893
| training =
|''[[The Resurrection of Lazarus]]'', 1896
| movement =
|''[[The Annunciation (Tanner)|The Annunciation]]'', 1898
| works =
|''[[Nicodemus Visiting Christ]]'', 1899
| patrons =
|''[[Flight into Egypt (Henry O. Tanner painting, 1899)|Flight into Egypt]]'', 1899
| awards =
}}
| patrons = [[Joseph Crane Hartzell]], [[Rodman Wanamaker]], [[Atherton Curtis]]
| awards = Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts' Lippincott Prize, 1900; Silver medal, Exposition Universelle, Paris, 1900
| elected = Elected a member of the National Academy of Design, 1910. Made an honorary chevalier of the Order of the Legion of Honor, 1923.
| spouse = {{marriage|Jessie Macauley Olssen|1899|1925|end=d.}}
| children = 1
}}
}}
'''Henry Ossawa Tanner''' (June 21, 1859 &ndash; May 25, 1937) was an African-American artist. He was the first [[African American art|African-American painter]] to gain international acclaim.<ref name =WhiteHouse>{{cite web | url=http://clinton2.nara.gov/WH/EOP/First_Lady/html/hot-bio.html | title=Henry Ossawa Tanner | accessdate=August 5, 2006}}</ref> He moved to Paris in 1891 to study, and decided to stay there, being readily accepted in French artistic circles.<ref>{{Cite book|title=Henry Ossawa Tanner: American Artist|author=Marcia M. Mathews|year= 1995|publisher=University of Chicago Press|isbn=0-226-51006-9}}</ref> His painting entitled ''Daniel in the Lions' Den'' was accepted into the 1896 [[Salon (Paris)|Salon]].<ref name="Matthews, Marcia"/>


'''Henry Ossawa Tanner''' (June 21, 1859 – May 25, 1937) was an American artist who spent much of his career in France. He became the first [[African-American art|African-American painter]] to gain international acclaim.<ref name =WhiteHouse>{{Cite web | url=http://clinton2.nara.gov/WH/EOP/First_Lady/html/hot-bio.html | title=Henry Ossawa Tanner | access-date=August 5, 2006 | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110527044240/http://clinton2.nara.gov/WH/EOP/First_Lady/html/hot-bio.html |archive-date=May 27, 2011 }}</ref> Tanner moved to [[Paris]], France, in 1891 to study at the [[Académie Julian]] and gained acclaim in French artistic circles. In 1923, the French government elected Tanner chevalier of the [[Legion of Honour|Legion of Honor]].<ref>{{Cite web |title=Artist Info |url=https://www.nga.gov/collection/artist-info.1919.html |access-date=November 25, 2021 |publisher=www.nga.gov}}</ref><ref>{{Cite book|last=Mosby|first=Dewey F.|url=http://archive.org/details/henryossawatanne01unse|title=Henry Ossawa Tanner|date=1991 |location=Philadelphia; New York |publisher=Philadelphia Museum of Art; Rizzoli International Publications |others=Philadelphia Museum of Art|isbn=978-0-8478-1346-9|page=50}}</ref>
After teaching himself some art, he had enrolled as a young man in 1879 at the [[Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts]] in Philadelphia. He was the only black student and became a favorite of the painter [[Thomas Eakins]], who had recently started teaching there. He also made other connections among artists, including [[Robert Henri]]. In the late 1890s he was sponsored for a trip to Palestine by [[Rodman Wanamaker]], who was impressed by his paintings of Biblical themes.


==Early life==
==Early life==
Henry Ossawa Tanner was born in [[Pittsburgh]], Pennsylvania.<ref name=NatlGallery/>
[[File:Eakins, Henry Ossawa Tanner 1902.jpg|thumb|[[Thomas Eakins]], a ''Portrait of Henry O. Tanner'', 1900. Oil on canvas, 24⅛" × 20¼". [[The Hyde Collection]].]]
His father [[Benjamin Tucker Tanner]] (1835–1923) became a bishop in the [[African Methodist Episcopal Church]] (AME), the first independent black denomination in the United States. He was educated at [[Avery College]] and [[Pittsburgh Theological Seminary|Western Theological Seminary]] in Pittsburgh, and developed a literary career.<ref>[http://loc.gov/exhibits/civil-war-in-america/biographies/benjamin-tucker-tanner.html The Civil War in America: Benjamin Tucker Tanner], ''Library of Congress Exhibitions''</ref> In addition, he was a political [[activist]], supporting abolition of slavery. Henry Tanner's mother [[Sarah Elizabeth Tanner]] may have been born into [[Slavery in the United States|slavery]] in Virginia.<ref name=homespun>{{cite book |title= Homespun Heroines and other women of distinction |date=1988 |publisher=Oxford University Press |place=New York |pages= 32–33 |url= https://archive.org/details/homespunheroines0000unse/page/32/mode/2up?q=miller}}</ref><ref name=escape2>{{cite web |title=Mother of Henry O. Tanner |publisher=Smithsonian American Art Museum |url= https://americanart.si.edu/artwork/mother-henry-o-tanner-23670}}</ref> Two different stories have emerged concerning her living in freedom; in one, her father drives the family from Winchester, Virginia to "the free state of Pennsylvania" in an ox cart.<ref name=homespun/> In the other, she escapes as a refugee to the North via the [[Underground Railroad]].<ref name=escape2/> There she met and married [[Benjamin Tucker Tanner]].<ref name=homespun/>
Tanner was born in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. His father Benjamin Tucker Tanner was a minister in the African Methodist Episcopal Church, the first independent black denomination in the United States. In addition, he was an editor and political [[activist]]. His mother Sarah Tanner was born into [[Slavery in the United States|slavery]] but had escaped to the North via the [[Underground Railroad]]. The family moved to Philadelphia when Tanner was young. There his father became a friend, sometime supporter, sometime critic of [[Frederick Douglass]].<ref name="eoaah" >{{Citation

Tanner was the first of at least five<ref name=NatlGallery/> children, and two of his brothers, Benjamin and Horace, died in infancy.<ref name=":1">{{Cite book|last=Woods|first=Naurice Frank|title=Henry Ossawa Tanner Art, Faith, Race, and Legacy|publisher=Taylor and Francis|year=2018|isbn=978-1-138-24194-7|location=New York, NY}}</ref> One of his sisters, [[Halle Tanner Dillon Johnson]], was the first woman to be certified to practice medicine in Alabama.<ref>{{Cite web|last=Wright|first=A. J.|date=May 18, 2017|title=Halle Tanner Dillon|url=http://www.encyclopediaofalabama.org/article/h-3925|access-date=November 8, 2020|website=Encyclopedia of Alabama}}</ref> His parents gave him a middle name that commemorated the struggle at [[Battle of Osawatomie|Osawatomie]] between pro- and anti-slavery partisans.<ref name="Baker">{{cite web|author=Kelly Jeanette Baker |title=Race, Religion, and Visual Mysticism |year=2003 |url=https://diginole.lib.fsu.edu/islandora/object/fsu%3A169182 |publisher=Florida State University}}</ref>
The family moved from Pittsburgh to [[Philadelphia]] when Tanner was a teenager.<ref name=Villa>{{cite news|url=https://www.artnews.com/art-news/news/henry-ossawa-tanner-childhood-home-preservation-campaign-1234648277/|author=Angelica Villa|date=November 29, 2022|title=Preservationists Move to Save Painter Henry Ossawa Tanner's Childhood Home in Philadelphia|work=ARTnews}}</ref> There his father became a friend of [[Frederick Douglass]], sometimes supporting him, sometimes criticizing.<ref name="eoaah" >{{Cite book
| editor-last = Finkelman
| editor-last = Finkelman
| editor-first = Paul
| editor-first = Paul
| year = 2006
| year = 2006
| type = Encyclopedia
| title = Encyclopedia of African American History 1619–1895
| work = Encyclopedia of African American History 1619-1895
| volume = 3
| volume = 3
| publisher = Oxford University Press
| publisher = Oxford University Press
| publication-place = New York
| location = New York
| page = 224--~~~~
| page = 224
}}</ref> [[Robert Douglass Jr.|Robert Douglass, Jr.]], a successful black artist in Philadelphia, was an early neighbor of the Tanner family, and Tanner wrote that he "used to pass and always stopped to look at his pictures in the window."<ref>{{Cite book|last1=Tanner|first1=Henry Ossawa|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=HDQlDQAAQBAJ|title=Henry Ossawa Tanner: Modern Spirit|last2=Marley|first2=Anna O.|date=2012|publisher=Univ of California Press|isbn=978-0-520-27074-9|page=19|language=en}}</ref> When Tanner was about 13 years old, he saw a landscape painter working in Fairmount Park, where he was walking with his father. He decided that he wanted to be a painter.<ref name=":1" />
}}</ref>


==Education==
==Education==
[[File:Henry Ossawa Tanner - Spinning By Firelight (1894).jpg|thumb|left|''Spinning By Firelight'' (1894)]]
[[File:Henry Ossawa Tanner - Spinning By Firelight (1894).jpg|thumb|left|200 px|''Spinning By Firelight'', 1894]]
Although many artists refused to accept an African-American apprentice, in 1879 Tanner enrolled at the [[Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts]] in Philadelphia, becoming the only black student.<ref name="eoaah"/> His decision to attend the school came at an exciting time in the history of artistic institutional training. Art academies had long relied on tired notions of study devoted almost entirely to plaster cast studies and anatomy lectures. This changed drastically with the addition of [[Thomas Eakins]] as “Professor of Drawing and Painting” to the Pennsylvania Academy. Eakins encouraged new methods such as study from live models, direct discussion of anatomy in male and female classes, and dissections of cadavers to further familiarity and understanding of the human body. Eakins’s progressive views and ability to excite and inspire his students would have a profound effect on Tanner. The young artist proved to be one of Eakins’ favorite students; two decades after Tanner left the Academy, Eakins painted his portrait, making him one of a handful of students to be so honored.<ref name="Parry, Ellwood C. III">Parry, Ellwood C. III. ''Three Nineteenth Century Afro-American Artists.'' Cedar Rapids, IA: Cedar Rapids Art Center, 1980.</ref>
Although many white artists refused to accept an African-American apprentice, in 1879 Tanner enrolled at the [[Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts]] in Philadelphia, becoming the only black student.<ref name="eoaah"/> His decision to attend the school came at a time when art academies increasingly focused on study from live models rather than plaster casts. [[Thomas Eakins]], a professor at the Pennsylvania Academy, was one of the first American artists to promote new approaches to artistic education including increased study from live models, discussion of anatomy in classes of both male and female students, and dissections of cadavers to teach anatomy. Eakins's progressive approach to art education had a profound effect on Tanner. The young artist was one of Eakins' favorite students; two decades after Tanner left the Academy, Eakins painted his portrait.<ref name="Parry, Ellwood C. III">Parry, Ellwood C. III. ''Three Nineteenth Century Afro-American Artists.'' Cedar Rapids, IA: Cedar Rapids Art Center, 1980.</ref>


At the Academy Tanner befriended artists with whom he kept in contact throughout the rest of his life, most notably [[Robert Henri]], one of the founders of the [[Ashcan School]]. During a relatively short time at the Academy, Tanner developed a thorough knowledge of anatomy and the skill to express his understanding of the weight and structure of the human figure on the canvas.<ref name="Matthews, Marcia">Matthews, Marcia.''Henry Ossawa Tanner:American Artist''. Chicago: The University of Chicago Press, 1969.</ref>
At the Academy, Tanner befriended artists with whom he kept in contact throughout the rest of his life, most notably [[Robert Henri]], one of the founders of the [[Ashcan School]]. During a relatively short time at the Academy, Tanner developed a thorough knowledge of anatomy and the skill to express his understanding of the weight and structure of the human figure on the canvas.<ref name="Matthews, Marcia">Matthews, Marcia. ''Henry Ossawa Tanner: American Artist''. Chicago: The University of Chicago Press, 1969.</ref>


Tanner's artistic studies were disrupted by illness, which was reported in November 1881 and said to have persisted into the following summer, when Tanner spent time recovering in the [[Adirondack mountains]].<ref>{{Cite book|last=Woods|first=Naurice Frank Jr.|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=skUrDwAAQBAJ&dq=tanner%20eakins&pg=PA29|title=Henry Ossawa Tanner: Art, Faith, Race, and Legacy|date=July 6, 2017|publisher=Taylor & Francis|isbn=978-1-315-27948-0|page=29|language=en}}</ref>
[[File:Henry Ossawa Tanner - Gateway, Tangier.jpg|thumb|Henry Ossawa Tanner, ''Gateway, Tangier'', 1912. [[St. Louis Art Museum]].]]


Tanner's teachers included [[Thomas Eakins]] (American realism, photography), [[Thomas Hovenden]] (American realism), [[Jean-Joseph Benjamin-Constant|Benjamin Constant]] (orientalist paintings and portraits, French academic) and [[Jean-Paul Laurens]] ([[history painting]], French academic).<ref name=Mosby20-21>{{Cite book|last=Mosby|first=Dewey F.|url=http://archive.org/details/henryossawatanne01unse|title=Henry Ossawa Tanner|date=1991 |location=Philadelphia; New York |publisher=Philadelphia Museum of Art; Rizzoli International Publications |others=Philadelphia Museum of Art|isbn=978-0-8478-1346-9|pages= 20–21, 59, 90. 93}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |title= Thomas Hovenden: American Painter of Hearth and Homeland|first= Michael |last= Schantz |date= October–November 2005 |journal= American Art Review |quote= [note: reprinted in Resource Library on April 22, 2009, with permission of the author and the Woodmere Art Museum, which was granted to TFAO on April 1, 2009] |url=https://tfaoi.org/aa/8aa/8aa547.htm |archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20110616203009/https://tfaoi.org/aa/8aa/8aa547.htm |archive-date=16 June 2011}}</ref>
==Issues of racism==
Although he gained confidence as an artist and began to sell his work, he had to deal with [[racism]] in Philadelphia. It had traditionally had strong ties to the South through numerous planter families and commercial ties; in addition, planters had sent their daughters to Philadelphia academies. After the Civil War, many African Americans left the rural South and settled in Northern urban centers, at times coming into conflict with the increasing population of immigrants from Ireland, southern and eastern Europe. Although painting became a therapeutic source of release for Tanner, the lack of acceptance in society was painful. In his autobiography ''The Story of an Artist’s Life'', Tanner describes the burden of racism:


==Painting style==
<blockquote>I was extremely timid and to be made to feel that I was not wanted, although in a place where I had every right to be, even months afterwards caused me sometimes weeks of pain. Every time any one of these disagreeable incidents came into my mind, my heart sank, and I was anew tortured by the thought of what I had endured, almost as much as the incident itself.<ref name="Bruce, Marcus C."/></blockquote>
[[File:The Annunciation, Philadelphia Museum of Art, W1899-1-1-pma, by Henry Ossawa Tanner.jpg|thumb|left|''[[The Annunciation (Tanner)|The Annunciation]]'', 1898, [[Philadelphia Museum of Art]]]]


Tanner painted landscapes, religious subjects, and scenes of daily life in a [[Realism (arts)|realistic]] style that echoed that of Eakins.<ref>{{cite web | url= http://www.artcyclopedia.com/artists/tanner_henry_ossawa.html | title=Henry Ossawa Tanner Online | access-date=August 5, 2006}}</ref><ref>{{cite web | url= http://www.huntfor.com/arthistory/c19th/realism.htm | archive-url= http://arquivo.pt/wayback/20091007214144/http://www.huntfor.com/arthistory/c19th/realism.htm | archive-date= October 7, 2009 | title= Realism – Realism Art | access-date= August 5, 2006 }}</ref> While works like ''The Banjo Lesson'' depicted everyday scenes of African American life, Tanner later painted religious subjects.<ref name =Springfield /> It is likely that Tanner's father, a minister in the [[African Methodist Episcopal]] Church, was a formative influence for him.<ref name="Matthews, Marcia"/>
In an attempt to gain artistic acceptance, Tanner left America for France in late 1891. Except for occasional brief returns home, he spent the rest of his life there.


Tanner was not limited to one specific approach to painting and drawing. His works reflect at times meticulous attention to detail and loose, [[expressionism|expressive]] brushstrokes in others. Often both methods are employed simultaneously. Tanner was also interested in the effects that color could have in a painting.<ref name="Kettlewell, James K.">Kettlewell, James K. ''The Art of Henry Ossawa Tanner.'' Glen Falls, NY: The Hyde Collection, 1975.</ref> Warmer compositions such as ''The Resurrection of Lazarus'' (1896) and ''[[The Annunciation (Tanner)|The Annunciation]]'' (1898) express the intensity and fire of religious moments, and the elation of transcendence between the divine and humanity. Other paintings emphasize cool hues, which became dominant in his work after the mid-1890s. A palette of indigo and turquoise—referred to as the "Tanner blues"—characterizes works such as ''The Three Marys'' (1910), ''Gateway'' (1912) and ''The Arch'' (1919).<ref name=":0">{{Cite book|title=African-American Art A visual and Cultural History|last=Farrington|first=Lisa|publisher=Oxford University Press|year=2017|isbn=978-0-19-999539-4|location=New York, New York|pages=97–98}}</ref> Works such as ''The Good Shepherd'' (1903) and ''Return of the Holy Women'' (1904) evoke a feeling of somber religiosity and introspection.
==Life abroad==
[[File:Brooklyn Museum - The Arch - Henry Ossawa Tanner - overall.jpg|thumb|left|Henry Ossawa Tanner - ''The Arch'' - [[Brooklyn Museum]]]]


Tanner often experimented with light in his works, which at times adds symbolic meaning. In ''The Annunciation'' (1898), for example, the [[archangel]] [[Gabriel]] is represented as a column of light that forms, together with the shelf in the upper left corner, a cross.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.philamuseum.org/doc_downloads/education/object_resources/104384.pdf|title=Teacher Resources: The Annunciation|website=The Annunciation, Henry Ossawa Tanner|publisher=Philadelphia Museum of Art|access-date=June 6, 2016}}</ref>
After a photography studio in [[Atlanta]] was unsuccessful, Tanner taught drawing at Clark College which is now called [[Clark Atlanta University]] for a short period.<ref name =Springfield>{{cite web | url=http://www.spfld-museum-of-art.org/collection/tanner.html | title=Henry Ossawa Tanner | publisher=Springfield Museum of Art |accessdate=August 5, 2006 |archiveurl = http://web.archive.org/web/20060110063014/http://www.spfld-museum-of-art.org/collection/tanner.html |archivedate = January 10, 2006}}</ref> In 1891 he traveled to [[Paris]], France to study at the [[Académie Julian]]. He also joined the [[American Art Students Club]] of [[Paris]]. Paris was a welcome escape for Tanner; within French art circles the issue of race mattered little. Tanner acclimated quickly to Parisian life.


==Issues of racism==
In Paris, Tanner was introduced to many new artists whose works would affect the way in which he painted. At the [[Louvre]], Tanner encountered and studied the works of [[Gustave Courbet]], [[Jean-Baptiste Chardin]] and [[Louis Le Nain]].<ref name="Shaw, Thomas M.">Shaw, Thomas M. ''What Manner of Men? A Reconsideration across the Synapses of Art History of Three Paintings and their Images of Men of African Descent.''Lanham, MD: University Press of America, 1997.</ref> These artists had painted scenes of ordinary people in their environment and the effect in Tanner’s work is noticeable. The influence of Courbet’s ''The Stonebreakers'' (1850; Destroyed) can be seen in the similarities painted by Tanner in his ''The Young Sabot Maker'' (1895). Both paintings explore the theme of apprenticeship and hand labor.<ref name="Shaw, Thomas M."/>
Although Tanner gained confidence as an artist and began to sell his work, he faced [[racism]] working as a professional artist in Philadelphia.<ref>{{Cite web|title=Henry Ossawa Tanner {{!}} Smithsonian American Art Museum|url=https://americanart.si.edu/artist/henry-ossawa-tanner-4742|access-date=June 4, 2021|website=americanart.si.edu|language=en-US}}</ref> In his autobiography, ''The Story of an Artist's Life'', Tanner described the burden of racism:


<blockquote>I was extremely timid and to be made to feel that I was not wanted, although in a place where I had every right to be, even months afterwards caused me sometimes weeks of pain. Every time any one of these disagreeable incidents came into my mind, my heart sank, and I was anew tortured by the thought of what I had endured, almost as much as the incident itself.<ref name="Bruce, Marcus C."/></blockquote>
He studied under renowned artists such as [[Jean Joseph Benjamin Constant]] and [[Jean-Paul Laurens]].<ref name="Bruce, Marcus C.">Bruce, Marcus C. ''Henry Ossawa Tanner.'' New York: The Crossroad Publishing Company, 2002.</ref> With their guidance, Tanner began to establish a reputation. He settled at the [[Étaples art colony]] in Normandy. Earlier Tanner painted marine scenes that showed man’s struggle with the sea, but by 1895 he was creating mostly religious works. A transitional work from this period is the recently rediscovered painting of a fishing boat tossed on the waves, which is held by the [[Smithsonian American Art Museum]].<ref>Details on the [http://americanart.si.edu/collections/search/artwork/?id=23651 museum site]</ref>
In the hope of earning enough money to travel to Europe, Tanner operated a photography studio in [[Atlanta]] during the late 1880s. The venture was unsuccessful. During this period Tanner met Bishop [[Joseph Crane Hartzell]], a trustee of Clark College (now [[Clark Atlanta University]]). Hartzell and his wife befriended Tanner, became his patrons, and recommended him for a teaching job at the college.<ref>Matthews, Marcia (1994). ''[https://books.google.com/books?id=0CgtERfkp-UC&pg=PA36 Henry Ossawa Tanner: American Artist]''. Chicago: The University of Chicago Press. p. 36. {{ISBN|0-226-51006-9}}.</ref> Tanner taught drawing at Clark College for a short period.<ref name =Springfield>{{cite web | url=http://www.spfld-museum-of-art.org/collection/tanner.html | title=Henry Ossawa Tanner | publisher=Springfield Museum of Art |access-date=August 5, 2006 |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20060110063014/http://www.spfld-museum-of-art.org/collection/tanner.html |archive-date = January 10, 2006}}</ref>
[[File:Henry Ossawa Tanner - The Good Shepherd - Google Art Project.jpg|thumb| 300px|''The Good Shepherd'']]
This is based on the description of a miracle in the [[Gospel of Matthew]] in which 'the boat was now in the middle of the sea, tossed by the waves, for the wind was contrary' (14:24). The simple resources at Étaples were well adapted to his subject matter, which in several cases featured Biblical figures in dark interiors.


==1891==
His painting entitled ''Daniel in the Lions' Den'' was accepted into the 1896 [[Salon (Paris)|Salon]].<ref name="Matthews, Marcia"/> Later that year he painted ''The Resurrection of Lazarus''.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://negroartist.com/negro%20artist/Henry%20Ossawa%20Tanner/pages/Henry%20Ossawa%20Tanner%20Daniel%20In%20The%20Lions%20Den_jpg.htm |title=Negro Artist site |publisher=Negroartist.com |date= |accessdate=2013-12-14}}</ref> The critical praise for this piece solidified Tanner’s position in the artistic elite and heralded the future direction of his paintings, which treated mostly biblical themes. Upon seeing ''The Resurrection of Lazarus'',<ref>{{cite web|url=http://negroartist.com/negro%20artist/Henry%20Ossawa%20Tanner/pages/Henry%20Tanner%20The%20Resurrection%20of%20Lazarus%201896_jpg.htm |title=Negro Artist site |publisher=Negroartist.com |date= |accessdate=2013-12-14}}</ref> art critic [[Rodman Wanamaker]] offered to cover an all expenses-paid trip for Tanner to the Middle East.<ref name="Matthews, Marcia"/> Wanamaker felt that any serious painter of biblical scenes needed to see the environment firsthand and that a painter of Tanner's caliber was well worth the investment.


Tanner set out for Rome by way of Liverpool and Paris on the ship ''City of Chester'' on 4 January 1891.<ref>{{cite journal |journal= The World's Work |title= Story of an artist's life I. |last= Tanner |first= Henry Ossawa|date= July 1909 |volume= 18 |issue= 3 |page= 11666|url= https://archive.org/details/sim_worlds-work_1909-06_18_2/page/11661/mode/1up}}</ref> He found Paris to his liking and discovered the [[Académie Julian]], where he began his studies in France.<ref name=Salondiscovery>{{cite journal |journal= The World's Work |title= Story of an artist's life II. Recognition |last= Tanner |first= Henry Ossawa|date= July 1909 |volume= 18 |issue= 3 |page= 11770|url= https://archive.org/details/sim_worlds-work_1909-07_18_3/page/11769/mode/1up |quote= As I now look back, it seems curious to me that I should have been able to arrive at thirty years of age with two years of that time in Paris and never to have heard of the Salon or, having heard of it, not to have at all realized its importance in the Art world... What a surprise awaited me in the court of that old palais! Hundreds of statues that appeared to me nearly all of them fairer than the “Venus de Milo” and upstairs the paintings — thousands of them — and nearly all of them much more to my taste than were the old masters of the Louvre... Here was something to work for, to get a picture here. This now furnished a definite impetus to my work in Paris — to be able to make a picture that should be admitted here — could I do it?}}</ref> He also joined the American Art Students Club. Paris was a welcome escape for Tanner; within French art circles, race mattered little.Tanner discovered the [[Paris Salon]] and set a goal to get his artwork accepted.<ref name=Salondiscovery/>
Tanner quickly accepted the offer. Before the next Salon opened, Tanner set forth for Palestine. Explorations of various mosques and biblical sites as well as character studies of the local population allowed Tanner to further his artistic training. His paintings developed a powerful air of mystery and spirituality. Tanner was not the first artist to study the Middle East in person. Since the 1830s, a growing interest in [[Orientalism]] had been growing in Europe. Artists such as [[Eugène Delacroix]], [[David Roberts (painter)|David Roberts]], and later Henri [[Matisse]] made such tours to capitalize on this curiosity.<ref name="Matthews, Marcia"/>

In his adopted home of France, he was given one of their highest honors in 1923, when he was made Chevalier of the [[Legion of Honor]] and considered this "citation by the French government to be the greatest honor of his illustrious career."<ref name="PMA Cat">{{cite book|last1=Mosby|first1=Dewey F.|last2=Sewell|first2=Darrell|last3=Alexander-Minter|first3=Rae|title=Henry Ossawa Tanner: catalogue|date=1991|publisher=Philadelphia Museum of Art|location=Philadelphia, PA|isbn=0-87633-086-3|page=32|edition=1st|accessdate=21 August 2014}}</ref>


==''The Banjo Lesson''==
==''The Banjo Lesson''==
[[File:Henry Ossawa Tanner - The Banjo Lesson.jpg|thumb|upright|Henry Ossawa Tanner, ''The Banjo Lesson'', 1893. ]]
[[File:Henry Ossawa Tanner, The Banjo Lesson (darker).jpg|thumb|upright|''[[The Banjo Lesson]]'', 1893]]


On a return visit to the United States in 1893, Tanner
In 1893 on a short return visit to the United States, Tanner painted his most famous work, ''The Banjo Lesson,'' while in Philadelphia. The painting shows an elderly black man teaching a boy, assumed to be his grandson, how to play the banjo. This deceptively simple-looking work explores several important themes. Blacks had long been stereotyped as entertainers in American culture, and the image of a black man playing the banjo appears throughout American art of the late 19th century. Thomas Worth,<ref name="Woods, Naurice Frank, Jr., Ph.D.">Woods, Naurice Frank, Jr., Ph.D. ''Insuperable Obstacles: The Impact of the Creative and Personal Development of Four Nineteenth Century African American Artists.'' The Union Institute, 1993.</ref> Willy Miller, Walter M. Dunk, Eastman Johnson, and Tanner’s teacher Thomas Eakins had tackled the subject in their artwork.<ref name="Shaw, Thomas M."/>
presented, “The American Negro in Art,” an essay, at the World’s Congress on Africa in Chicago,<ref name=NatlGallery>Henry Ossawa Tanner. American, 1859 - 1937. National Gallery of Art. https://www.nga.gov/collection/artist-info.1919.html</ref>
and painted [[The Banjo Lesson]], one of his most recognized works that began as a series of sketches of Black people living in [[Appalachia]].<ref>Khalid, Farisa. Henry Ossawa Tanner, The Banjo Lesson. SmartHistory. The Center for Public Art History. https://smarthistory.org/tanner-banjo/</ref> The painting shows an elderly black man teaching a boy, assumed to be his grandson, how to play the banjo.<ref name=":0"/><ref name="Shaw, Thomas M."/> The image of a black man playing the banjo appears throughout American art of the late 19th century. <ref name="Woods, Naurice Frank, Jr., Ph.D.">Woods, Naurice Frank, Jr., Ph.D. ''Insuperable Obstacles: The Impact of the Creative and Personal Development of Four Nineteenth Century African American Artists''. The Union Institute, 1993.</ref><ref name="Shaw, Thomas M."/>


==Life in Paris==
These images are often reduced to a minstrel-type portrayal. Tanner painted a sensitive reinterpretation. Instead of a generalization, the painting portrays a specific moment of human interaction. The two characters concentrate intently on the task before them. They seem to be oblivious to the rest of the world, which enlarges the sense of real contact and cooperation. The skillfully painted portraits of the individuals make it obvious that these are real people and not types.
Except for occasional brief returns home, Tanner spent the rest of his life in Paris. He acclimated quickly to Parisian life, and became friends with [[Atherton Curtis]].<ref>{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=skUrDwAAQBAJ&dq=atherton.curtis.killed&pg=PA206|title=Henry Ossawa Tanner: Art, Faith, Race, and Legacy|year=2018|last=Woods |first=Naurice Frank Jr.|publisher=Taylor & Francis |isbn=978-1-315-27948-0}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=nrVPAAAAMAAJ&q=atherton.curtis.killed|title=Six Black Masters of American Art|author1=Bearden, Romare|author2=Henderson, Harry Brinton|publisher=Zenith Books|year=1972|page=55|isbn=978-0-385-01211-9}}</ref> He was part of a community of artists in [[Mount Kisco, New York]] for six months in 1902, at the behest of Curtis, and returned the following winter.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://transcription.si.edu/view/25431/AAA-tannhenr00222|title=Atherton Curtis letter to Jessie Tanner after the death of H. O. Tanner in 1937}}</ref>
[[File:Portrait of Mr. and Mrs. Atherton Curtis with Still Life 1983.95.192 1a.jpg|thumb|left|Atherton Curtis with his wife, by Tanner.]]
In Paris, Tanner continued his studies under renowned artists such as [[Jean Joseph Benjamin Constant]] and [[Jean-Paul Laurens]].<ref name="Bruce, Marcus C.">Bruce, Marcus C. ''Henry Ossawa Tanner.'' New York: Crossroad Publishing, 2002.</ref> With their guidance, he began to establish a reputation in France. He settled at the [[Étaples art colony]] in Normandy.
There he was introduced to many artists whose works would affect his approach to art. At the [[Louvre]], he encountered and studied the works of [[Gustave Courbet]], [[Jean-Baptiste Chardin]] and [[Louis Le Nain]].<ref name="Shaw, Thomas M.">Shaw, Thomas M. ''What Manner of Men? A Reconsideration across the Synapses of Art History of Three Paintings and their Images of Men of African Descent.'' Lanham, MD: University Press of America, 1997.</ref> These artists had painted scenes of ordinary people in their environment, and the influence in Tanner's work is noticeable. That of Courbet's ''[[The Stone Breakers]]'' (1850; destroyed) can be seen in the similarities in Tanner's ''The Young Sabot Maker'' (1895). Both paintings explore the themes of apprenticeship and [[manual labor]].<ref name="Shaw, Thomas M."/>


Earlier, Tanner had painted marine scenes of man's struggle with the sea, but by 1895 he was creating mostly religious works. His shift to painting biblical scenes occurred as he was undergoing a spiritual struggle. In a letter he wrote to his parents on Christmas 1896, he stated, "I have made up my mind to serve Him [God] more faithfully."<ref>Woods, Naurice Frank. "Embarking on a New Covenant: Henry Ossawa Tanner's Spiritual Crisis of 1896." ''American Art'', vol. 27, no. 1, 2013, pp. 94–103. ''JSTOR'', www.jstor.org/stable/10.1086/670686.</ref> A transitional work from this period is the recently rediscovered painting of a fishing boat tossed on the waves, which is held by the [[Smithsonian American Art Museum]].<ref>Details on the [http://americanart.si.edu/collections/search/artwork/?id=23651 museum site]</ref>
In addition to being a meaningful exploration of human qualities, the piece is masterfully painted. Tanner undertakes the difficult endeavor of portraying two separate and varying light sources. A natural white, blue glow from outside enters from the left while the warm light from a fireplace is apparent on the right. The figures are illuminated where the two light sources meet; some have hypothesized this as a manifestation of Tanner’s situation in transition between two worlds, his American past and his newfound home in France.<ref name="Shaw, Thomas M."/>


Tanner's painting ''Daniel in the Lions' Den'' was accepted into the 1896 [[Salon (Paris)|Salon]].<ref name="Matthews, Marcia"/> Later that year he painted ''The Resurrection of Lazarus'' (1896, [[Musée d'Orsay]], Paris) that was purchased by the French government after winning the third-place medal at the 1897 Salon.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://negroartist.com/negro%20artist/Henry%20Ossawa%20Tanner/pages/Henry%20Ossawa%20Tanner%20Daniel%20In%20The%20Lions%20Den_jpg.htm |title=Negro Artist site |publisher=Negroartist.com |access-date=December 14, 2013}}</ref> Upon seeing ''The Resurrection of Lazarus'',<ref>{{cite web|url=http://negroartist.com/negro%20artist/Henry%20Ossawa%20Tanner/pages/Henry%20Tanner%20The%20Resurrection%20of%20Lazarus%201896_jpg.htm |title=Negro Artist site |publisher=Negroartist.com |access-date=December 14, 2013}}</ref> [[Rodman Wanamaker]], an art critic and a "major patron of contemporary religious art,"<ref name=RichmondMoll/> offered to pay all the expenses for Tanner to visit the [[Middle East]].<ref name="Matthews, Marcia"/> Wanamaker felt that any serious painter of biblical scenes needed to see the environment firsthand and that a painter of Tanner's caliber was well worth the investment. Tanner accepted Wanamaker's offer.<ref name=RichmondMoll>Richmond-Moll, Jeffrey. Souvenir from the Holy Land: On Henry Ossawa Tanner’s Abraham’s Oak. Smithsonian American Art Museum. https://americanart.si.edu/blog/art-bites-tanners-abrahams-oak</ref> For four months in 1897 and, again, for six months in 1898-1899, he trekked a popular tourist route through Palestine and North Africa, pitching his tent in the arid region.<ref name=RichmondMoll/>
==Painting style==
[[File:Henry Ossawa Tanner - The Annunciation.jpg|thumb|left|Henry Ossawa Tanner, ''The Annunciation'', 1898. [[Philadelphia Museum of Art]].]]
Tanner is often regarded as a [[Realism (arts)|realist]] painter,<ref>{{cite web | url= http://www.artcyclopedia.com/artists/tanner_henry_ossawa.html | title=Henry Ossawa Tanner Online | accessdate=August 5, 2006}}</ref> focusing on accurate depictions of subjects.<ref>{{cite web | url= http://www.huntfor.com/arthistory/c19th/realism.htm | title=Realism - Realism Art | accessdate=August 5, 2006}}</ref> While works such as ''The Banjo Lesson'' were concerned with everyday life as an African American, Tanner later painted themes based on religious subjects, for which he is now best known.<ref name =Springfield /> It is likely that Tanner's father, a minister in the [[African Methodist Episcopal]] Church, was a formative influence for him.<ref name="Matthews, Marcia"/>


Tanner did not exhibit at the Salon in 1907, due to eye strain, but in 1908 entered ''The Wise and Foolish Virgins'' which he worked on in 1906, 1907 and finished in 1908. Newspapers don't record a Salon entry for 1909; but he focused his 1908 energy on a one-man exhibition of his artwork in New York, and the 1909 papers continued to talk about that event. Tanner may have avoided displaying at the Salon 1910, 1911, 1912, and 1913.<ref name=1910revenge/>
Tanner's body of work is not limited to one specific approach to painting. His works vary from meticulous attention to detail in some paintings to loose, [[expressionism|expressive]] brushstrokes in others. Often both methods are employed simultaneously. The combination of these two techniques makes for a masterful balance of skillful precision and powerful expression. Tanner was also interested in the effects that color could have in a painting.<ref name="Kettlewell, James K.">Kettlewell, James K. ''The Art of Henry Ossawa Tanner.'' Glen Falls, NY: The Hyde Collection, 1975.</ref> Many of his paintings accentuate a specific area of the color spectrum. Warmer compositions such as ''The Resurrection of Lazarus''(1896) and ''The Annunciation'' (1898) express the intensity and fire of religious moments, and the elation of transcendence between the divine and humanity. Other paintings emphasize cooler, blue hues. Works such as ''The Good Shepherd'' (1903) and ''Return of the Holy Women'' (1904) evoke a feeling of somber religiosity and introspection. Tanner often experimented with light in a composition. The source and intensity of light and shadow in his paintings create a physical, almost tangible space and atmosphere while adding emotion and mood to the environment.


In 1914, Tanner's mother died,<ref name=SmithsMary>Tanner, Henry Ossawa. Mary, ca. 1914, oil on canvas, 45 1⁄2 x 34 3⁄4 in. (115.5 x 88.2 cm.), Smithsonian American Art Museum, Gift of Mrs. Dorothy L. McGuire, 1991.102. https://americanart.si.edu/artwork/mary-32409</ref> [[World War I]] started, and he returned to the Paris Salon after "several years of absence," bringing his 1912 painting ''[[:File:Christ in the House of Lazarus, lost painting of Henry Ossawa Tanner.jpg|Christ in the House of Lazarus]]'' and ''[[:File:Mary, by Henry Ossawa Tanner.webp|Mary]]''.<ref name=Mosby252-255>Mosby, Dewey F. Henry Ossawa Tanner. First trade edition. Philadelphia, PA : Philadelphia Museum of Art ; New York, NY : Rizzoli International Publications. 1991.</ref><ref name=SmithsMary/> He had remarked in 1910 "that he would not exhibit in the salon again as they had stuck his picture into a corner which everyone knows is almost an insult."<ref name=1910revenge>{{cite news|title= Artists Allege Discrimination out of Revenge |work= The Montreal Star |place= Montreal, Quebec, Canada |date= 2 July 1910 |page= 3 |url=https://www.newspapers.com/article/the-montreal-star-trade-war-in-painting/130820520/ }}</ref> French artists were upset over a U.S. tariff on their paintings, and said to be taking revenge in the Salon.<ref name=1910revenge/>
==Marriage and family==
[[File:Henry Ossawa Tanner Family.jpg|thumb|The Tanner family at home in France. Handwritten note on verso identifies the individuals seated at the table as: Jesse Tanner, Mrs. Tanner, Barlow, Henry Ossawa Tanner.]]
In 1899 he married Jessie Olsson, a white Swedish-American opera singer.<ref>Marley, Anna O. "Introduction" in ''Modern Spirit'' Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts. Philadelphia. 2012.</ref> A contemporary, Virginia Walker Course, described their relationship as one of equal talents, but racist attitudes insisted the relationship was unequal:
"Fan, did you ever hear of a miss [sic] Olsson of Portland? She has a beautiful voice I believe and came to Paris to cultivate it and she has married a darkey artist [...] He is an awefully [sic] talented man but he is black. [...] She seems like a well educated girl and really very nice but it makes me sick to see a cultivated woman marry a man like that. I don't know his work but he is very talented they say." <ref>Course, Virginia Walker qtd. by Jean-Claude Lesage in "Tanner, The Pillar of Trepied."''Modern Spirit'' Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts. Philadelphia. 2012. pg 88</ref>
Jessie Tanner died in 1925, twelve years before her husband, and he grieved her deeply through the twenties. He sold the family home in Les Charmes where they had been so happy together. They are buried next to each other in Sceaux, Hauts-de-Seine.<ref name= Marley>pg 41</ref>
They had a son Jesse, who survived Tanner at his death.<ref name="Springfield"/>


==Later years==
==Later years==
[[File:Henry Ossawa Tanner - Sodom and Gomorrha.jpg|thumb|left|upright|''Sodom and Gomorrha'', 1920]]
[[File:Sodom and Gomorrah, by Henry Ossawa Tanner.jpg|thumb|left|upright|''Sodom and Gomorrah'', 1920]]

During [[World War I]], Tanner worked for the [[Red Cross]] Public Information Department, at which time he also painted images from the front lines of the war.<ref name = esper>{{cite web | url = http://esperstamps.org/aa8.htm | title = Henry Ossawa Tanner | accessdate =August 9, 2006}}</ref> His works featuring African-American troops were rare during the war. In 1923 the French state made him a knight of the [[Legion of Honour]] for his work as an artist.
During [[World War I]], Tanner worked for the [[Red Cross]] Public Information Department, during which time he also painted images from the front lines of the war.<ref name=esper>{{cite web | url = http://esperstamps.org/aa8.htm | title = Henry Ossawa Tanner | access-date = August 9, 2006 | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20060829020120/http://esperstamps.org/aa8.htm | archive-date = August 29, 2006 }}</ref> His works featuring African-American troops were rare during the war. In 1923 the French state made him a knight of the [[Legion of Honour]] for his work as an artist.


Tanner met with fellow African-American artist [[Palmer Hayden]] in Paris circa 1927. They discussed artistic technique and he gave Hayden advice on interacting with French society.<ref>
Tanner met with fellow African-American artist [[Palmer Hayden]] in Paris circa 1927. They discussed artistic technique and he gave Hayden advice on interacting with French society.<ref>
{{Cite book| editor-last = Finkelman| editor-first = Paul| year = 2009| title = Encyclopedia of African American History (1896 to the present)| volume = 2| publisher = Oxford University Press| location = New York| page = 393}}</ref> He was also an inspiration to other artists studying in France, including [[Hale Woodruff]], [[Romare Bearden]], and other artists associated with [[Black Abstractionism]].<ref name=Mosby20-21/>
{{Citation
| editor-last = Finkelman
| editor-first = Paul
| year = 2009
| type = Encyclopedia
| work = Encyclopedia of African American History (1896 to the present)
| volume = 2
| publisher = Oxford University Press
| publication-place = New York
| page = 393
}}</ref>


Several of Tanner's paintings were purchased by Atlanta art collector [[J. J. Haverty]]. He had founded Haverty Furniture Co. and was instrumental in establishing the [[High Museum of Art]]. Tanner's ''[[:File:Etaples Fisher Folk by Henry Ossawa Tanner, 1923, High Museum of Art.jpg|Étaples Fisher Folk]]'' is among several paintings from the Haverty collection now in the High Museum's permanent collection.<ref>http://www.high.org/collections/permanent/default.aspx</ref>
Several of Tanner's paintings were purchased by Atlanta art collector [[J. J. Haverty]], who founded [[Havertys|Haverty Furniture Co.]] and was instrumental in establishing the [[High Museum of Art]]. Tanner's ''[[:File:Etaples Fisher Folk by Henry Ossawa Tanner, 1923, High Museum of Art.jpg|Étaples Fisher Folk]]'' is among several paintings from the Haverty collection now in the High Museum's permanent collection.


Tanner died peacefully in Paris, France on May 25, 1937.<ref name = esper/>
Tanner died peacefully at his home in Paris, France, on May 25, 1937.<ref name = esper/> He is buried at [[:fr:Cimetière de Sceaux|Sceaux Cemetery]] in [[Sceaux, Hauts-de-Seine]], a suburb of Paris.


==Marriage and family==
==Legacy==
[[File:Henry Ossawa Tanner Family.jpg|thumb|The Tanner family at home in France. Handwritten note on verso identifies the individuals seated at the table as: Jesse Tanner, Mrs. Tanner, [[Myron G. Barlow]], Henry Ossawa Tanner.]]
[[File:The Seine - Henry Ossawa Tanner.jpg|thumb|Henry Ossawa Tanner, ''[[Seine|The Seine]]'' (c. 1902), one of three paintings by African Americans on display in 2012 in the [[National Gallery of Art]]'s American Art galleries.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://blogs.artinfo.com/modernartnotes/2012/02/a-modest-improvement-at-the-national-gallery/ |title=A modest improvement at the National Gallery &#124; Tyler Green: Modern Art Notes &#124; ARTINFO.com |publisher=Blogs.artinfo.com |date=2012-02-03 |accessdate=2013-12-14}}</ref>]]


In 1899 he married Jessie Olsson, a Swedish-American opera singer.<ref>Marley, Anna O. "Introduction" in ''Modern Spirit'' Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts. Philadelphia. 2012.</ref> A contemporary, Virginia Walker Course, described their relationship as one of equal talents, but racist attitudes insisted the relationship was unequal:
Tanner's work was influential during his career; he has been called "the greatest African American painter to date."<ref>{{Citation
| editor-last = Finkelman
| editor-first = Paul
| year = 2006
| type = Encyclopedia
| work = Encyclopedia of African American History 1619-1895
| volume = 1
| publisher = Oxford University Press
| publication-place = New York
| page = 101
}}</ref> The early paintings of [[William Edouard Scott]], with whom Tanner studied in France, show the influence of Tanner’s technique.<ref name="Shaw, Thomas M."/> In addition, some of [[Norman Rockwell]]’s illustrations deal with the same themes and compositions that Tanner pursued. Rockwell's proposed cover of the ''[[Literary Digest]]'' in 1922, for example, shows an older black man playing the banjo for his grandson. The light sources are nearly identical to those in Tanner's ''Banjo Lesson.'' A fireplace illuminates the right side of the picture while natural light enters from the left. Both use similar objects as well such as the clothing, chair, crumpled hat on the floor.<ref name="Shaw, Thomas M."/>


<blockquote>Fan, did you ever hear of a miss [sic] Olsson of Portland? She has a beautiful voice I believe and came to Paris to cultivate it and she has married a darkey artist ... He is an awefully [sic] talented man but he is black. ... She seems like a well educated girl and really very nice but it makes me sick to see a cultivated woman marry a man like that. I don't know his work but he is very talented they say.<ref>Course, Virginia Walker qtd. by Jean-Claude Lesage in "Tanner, the Pillar of Trepied". ''Modern Spirit''. Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts. Philadelphia. 2012, p. 88.</ref></blockquote>
Tanner's ''Sand Dunes at Sunset, Atlantic City'' (c. 1885 oil on canvas) hangs in the [[Green Room (White House)|Green Room]] at the [[White House]]; it is the first painting by an African-American artist to be purchased for the permanent collection of the White House. The painting is a landscape with a "view across the cool gray of a shadowed beach to dunes made pink by the late afternoon sunlight. A low haze over the water partially hides the sun." It was purchased for $100,000 by the White House Endowment Fund during the [[Bill Clinton]] administration from Dr. Rae Alexander-Minter, grandniece of the artist.<ref>"White House Acquires Tanner Painting" http://clinton2.nara.gov/WH/EOP/First_Lady/html/102296.html</ref>


Jessie Tanner died in 1925, twelve years before her husband, and he grieved her deeply through the 1920s. He sold the family home in Les Charmes where they had been so happy together. They are buried next to each other in Sceaux, Hauts-de-Seine.<ref>Marley (2012), p. 41.</ref>
==Selected works==


They had a son, Jesse, who survived Tanner at his death.<ref name="Springfield"/>
[[File:Henry Ossawa Tanner's studio.jpg|thumb|450px||Henry Ossawa Tanner's studio]]
* ''Seascape-Jetty'' (c.1876–1878)
* ''Pomp at the Zoo'' (1880) Private Collection
* ''Sand Dunes at Sunset, Atlantic City'' (1886) Estate of [[Sadie Tanner Mossell Alexander|Sadie T.M. Alexander]] (On permanent display at White House)
* ''The Banjo Lesson'' (1893) Hampton University Museum, Virginia
* ''The Thankful Poor'' (1894) William H. and Camille O. Cosby
* ''The Young Sabot Maker'' (1895) Estate of Sadie T.M. Alexander
* ''Daniel in the Lions' Den'' (1895) [[Los Angeles County Museum of Art]]
* ''The Resurrection of Lazarus'' (1896) [[Musée d'Orsay]], Paris
* ''[[Lions in the Desert]]'' (c. 1897–1900) [[Smithsonian American Art Museum]]
* ''The Annunciation'' (1898) [[Philadelphia Museum of Art]], W.P Wilstach Collection
* ''Boy and Sheep Lying under a Tree'' (1881) Private Collection (On display at the [[Philadelphia Museum of Art]])
* ''The Good Shepard'' (1903) [[Jane Voorhees Zimmerli Art Museum]], Rutgers University
* ''Return of the Holy Women'' (1904) Cedar Rapids Art Gallery, Iowa
* ''Two Disciples at the Tomb'' (1905–1906) [[Art Institute of Chicago]]
* ''The Holy Family'' (1909&ndash;10) Muskegon Museum of Art, Michigan, Hackley Picture Fund
* ''Moroccan Scene'' (about 1912) [[Birmingham Museum of Art]], Alabama
* ''Palace of Justice, Tangier'' (1912&ndash;13) Smithsonian American Art Museum<ref name="WDL">{{cite web |url = http://www.wdl.org/en/item/512/ |title = Palace of Justice, Tangier, Morocco |website = [[World Digital Library]] |date = 1890–1900 |accessdate = 2013-06-27 }}</ref>
* ''Scene in Cairo'' [[Mabee-Gerrer Museum of Art]], Shawnee, Oklahoma
=== Other works ===
<gallery widths="170px" heights="200px" perrow="4">


==Friends and colleagues==
File:Henry Ossawa Tanner - Abraham's Oak - Google Art Project.jpg| ''Abraham's Oak''
File:Henry Ossawa Tanner - 'A View of Fez', c. 1912, High Museum.JPG|''A View of Fez''
File:Henry Ossawa Tanner - View of the Seine, looking toward Notre Dame (1896).jpg|''View of the Seine, looking toward Notre Dame''
File:Henry Ossawa Tanner - Coastal Landscape, France.jpg|''Coastal Landscape'', France, 1919


Tanner's friends and colleagues included [[Hermon MacNeil]] (sculptor), [[Hermann Dudley Murphy]] (landscapes), [[Paul Gauguin]] ([[synthetism]]), [[Myron G. Barlow]] ([[genre painting]]), Charles Hovey Pepper (Japanese style woodblocks). [[Charles Filiger]] (symbolist), [[Armand Séguin (painter)|Armand Séguin]] ([[Post-Impressionism]]), [[Jan Verkade]] (Post-Impressionism, Christian symbolist), [[Paul Sérusier]] ([[abstract art]]), and [[Gustave Loiseau]] (Post-Impressionism).<ref name=Mosby20-21/><ref>{{cite web |publisher= Smithsonian Archives of American Art |title= Henry Ossawa Tanner papers, 1860s-1978, bulk 1890-1937 311: Photographs of Artwork, circa 1920s |url= https://www.aaa.si.edu/collections/henry-ossawa-tanner-papers-9229/series-5/box-3-folder-11 |quote= [note: image download number 54] To my dear Henry Tanner Charles H. Pepper Paris '99}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |publisher= Smithsonian Archives of American Art |title=Henry Ossawa Tanner papers, 1860s-1978, bulk 1890-1937: Henry Tanner and family dining outdoors, 1907 or 1908 |url= https://www.aaa.si.edu/collections/items/detail/henry-tanner-and-family-dining-outdoors-3581 |quote= [note: image download numbers 1 and 2] Jesse Tanner, Mrs. Tanner, Barlow, Henry Tanner}}</ref>
File:Henry Ossawa Tanner - Fishermen at Sea.jpg|''Fishermen at Sea''
File:Henry Ossawa Tanner - The Young Sabot Maker - Google Art Project.jpg|''The Young Sabot Maker''
File:Henry Ossawa Tanner - Mary 1914.jpg|'' Mary ''
File:Henry Ossawa Tanner, The Disciples See Christ Walking on the Water, c. 1907.jpg|''The Disciples See Christ Walking on the Water''


==Legacy==
File:Henry Ossawa Tanner - Angels Appearing before the Shepherds.jpg| ''Angels Appearing before the Shepherds''
[[File:Henry Ossawa Tanner, The Seine, c. 1902, NGA 52624.jpg|thumb|Tanner's ''The Seine'' (c. 1902), one of three paintings by African Americans on display in 2012 in the [[National Gallery of Art]]'s American Art galleries.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://blogs.artinfo.com/modernartnotes/2012/02/a-modest-improvement-at-the-national-gallery/ |title=A modest improvement at the National Gallery &#124; Tyler Green: Modern Art Notes &#124; ARTINFO.com |publisher=Blogs.artinfo.com |date=February 3, 2012 |access-date=December 14, 2013}}</ref>]]
File:Henry Ossawa Tanner - Jesus and nicodemus.jpg|''Jesus and Nicodemus''
File:Daniel in the Lions' Den LACMA 22.6.3.jpg|''Daniel in the Lions' Den''
File:Henry Ossawa Tanner - The Annunciation to the Shepards.jpg| ''The Annunciation to the Shepherds''


Tanner's work was influential during his career; he has been called "the greatest African American painter to date."<ref>{{Cite book
</gallery>
| editor-last = Finkelman| editor-first = Paul| year = 2006| title = Encyclopedia of African American History 1619–1895| volume = 1| publisher = Oxford University Press| location = New York| page = 101}}</ref> The early paintings of [[William Edouard Scott]], who studied with Tanner in France, show the influence of Tanner's technique.<ref name="Shaw, Thomas M."/> In addition, some of [[Norman Rockwell]]'s illustrations deal with the same themes and compositions that Tanner pursued. Rockwell's proposed cover of the ''[[Literary Digest]]'' in 1922, for example, shows an older black man playing the banjo for his grandson. The light sources are nearly identical to those in Tanner's ''Banjo Lesson.'' A fireplace illuminates the right side of the picture, while natural light enters from the left. Both use similar objects as well such as the clothing, chair, crumpled hat on the floor.<ref name="Shaw, Thomas M."/> Some other major artists Tanner mentored include [[William A. Harper]] and [[Hale Woodruff]].<ref name=":1" />
<gallery widths="390px" heights="200px" perrow="4">

File:Henry Ossawa Tanner - Sand Dunes at Sunset, Atlantic City - Google Art Project.jpg|Sand Dunes at Sunset, Atlantic City - in the White House.
Tanner's ''Sand Dunes at Sunset, Atlantic City'' (c. 1885; oil on canvas) hangs in the [[Green Room (White House)|Green Room]] at the [[White House]]; it is the first painting by an African-American artist to have been purchased for the permanent collection of the White House. The painting is a landscape with a "view across the cool gray of a shadowed beach to dunes made pink by the late afternoon sunlight. A low haze over the water partially hides the sun." It was bought for $100,000 by the White House Endowment Fund during the [[Bill Clinton]] administration from Dr. Rae Alexander-Minter, grandniece of the artist.<ref>[http://clinton2.nara.gov/WH/EOP/First_Lady/html/102296.html "White House Announces Acquisition of Henry Ossawa Tanner Painting for Permanent White House Collection"] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110716023250/http://clinton2.nara.gov/WH/EOP/First_Lady/html/102296.html |date=July 16, 2011 }}. Life in the White House.</ref>
File:Destruction of Sodom and Gomorrah by Henry Ossawa Tanner, 1929-30, High Museum of Art.jpg|Destruction of Sodom and Gomorrah, 1929-30, High Museum of Art

</gallery>
His correspondence with Curtis between 1904 and 1937 is held at the [[Smithsonian Institution]].<ref>{{cite web|url=https://transcription.si.edu/project/25431|title=Henry Ossawa Tanner correspondence with Atherton Curtis and Ingeborg Curtis (1904–1937)}}</ref>

Tanner's work was included in the 2015 exhibition ''[[We Speak: Black Artists in Philadelphia, 1920s-1970s]]'' at the [[Woodmere Art Museum]].<ref name="Woodmere Art Museum">{{cite web |title=We Speak: Black Artists in Philadelphia, 1920s-1970s|url=https://woodmereartmuseum.org/experience/exhibitions/we-speak-black-artists-in-philadelphia-1920s-1970s-95 |website=Woodmere Art Museum |access-date=June 12, 2022 |language=en-gb}}</ref>

==Awards==
[[File:Daniel in the Lions’ Den, by Henry Ossawa Tanner, 1896.webp|thumb|left|Photo of Tanner's lost painting, ''Daniel in the Lion's Den'', 1896.]]
*1895, Atlanta, [[Cotton States and International Exposition]]: bronze medal for ''[[The Bagpipe Lesson]]''.<ref>{{cite journal |title= Henry O. Tanner: Atlanta Interlude |author= Carlyn G. Crannell Romeyn |journal= The Atlanta Historical Journal |volume= 27 |issue= 4 |date= Winter 1983–1984 |page=38 |url= https://album.atlantahistorycenter.com/digital/collection/AHBull/id/24611/rec/1 |quote= On the other hand, it is possible that some of tanner's Atlanta friends secured the three works (including ''The Bagpipe Lesson'' which won a bronze medal) for this exposition.}}</ref>
*1896, [[Paris Salon|Salon]]: honorable mention<ref name=awards>{{cite news |title= Henry Ossawa Tanner — Artist |work= The Northwestern Bulletin-Appeal |place= Saint Paul, Minnesota |date= July 25, 1925 |page= 2 |url= https://www.newspapers.com/article/the-northwestern-bulletin-appeal-henry-o/126437792/}}</ref> for ''[[:File:Daniel in the Lions Den, from 1896 Salon catalog.jpg|Daniel in the Lions' Den]]''<ref name=dewey1>{{Cite book|last=Mosby|first=Dewey F.|url=http://archive.org/details/henryossawatanne01unse|title=Henry Ossawa Tanner|date=1991 |location=Philadelphia; New York |publisher=Philadelphia Museum of Art; Rizzoli International Publications |others=Philadelphia Museum of Art|isbn=978-0-8478-1346-9|page=39 |quote= 1895 May. Paris, Salon. ''Intérieur Bretagne'' [Brittany Interior], ''Le Jeune Sabotier'' [The Young Sabot Maker], pastel of New Jersey coast by moonlight. }}</ref>
*1897, Salon: third class medal<ref name=awards/> for ''[[:File:Henry Ossawa Tanner, Resurrection of Lazarus.jpg|Raising of Lazarus]]''<ref name=timeline>{{cite news |title= Henry Ossawa Tanner 1859/1937|work=Detroit Free Press |date=July 14, 1991 |pages= 284–285 |url=https://www.newspapers.com/article/detroit-free-press-henry-ossawa-tanner-t/126473501/}}</ref>
*1899, Philadelphia Academy of Fine Art: Walter Lippincott prize<ref name=awards/> for ''[[:File:Henry Ossawa Tanner - Jesus and nicodemus.jpg|Christ and Nicodemus on a Rooftop]]''<ref name=timeline/>
*1900, [[Exposition Universelle (1900)|Paris Exposition]]: silver medal<ref name=awards/><ref name=obit/> for ''[[:File:Daniel in the Lions Den, from 1896 Salon catalog.jpg|Daniel in the Lions' Den]]''<ref name=dewey1/>
*1901, [[Pan-American Exposition|Buffalo Exposition]]: silver medal<ref name=awards/><ref name=obit/> for ''[[:File:Daniel in the Lions Den, from 1896 Salon catalog.jpg|Daniel in the Lions' Den]]''<ref name=dewey1/>
*1904, [[Louisiana Purchase Exposition|St. Louis Exposition]]: silver medal<ref name=awards/><ref name=obit/> for ''[[:File:Daniel in the Lions Den, from 1896 Salon catalog.jpg|Daniel in the Lions' Den]]''<ref name=dewey1/>
*1906, Salon: second class medal for ''The Disciples at Emmaus''<ref name=dewey1/>
*1906, Art Institute of Chicago, Norman Wait Harris silver medal for ''[[:File:Two Disciples at the Tomb c1906 Henry Ossawa Tanner.jpg|The Two Disciples at the Tomb]]''<ref name=awards/><ref>{{cite book |title= American Oil Paintings and Sculpture: 28th Annual Art Exhibition, Art Institute of Chicago November 16, 1915 to January 2, 1916 |url= https://www.artic.edu/assets/5091f4d0-61b8-7e7d-385d-e1158fe7cd87}}</ref><ref name=timeline/>
*1915, [[Panama–Pacific International Exposition]], San Francisco: gold medal<ref name=awards/><ref name=obit>{{cite news |title= Noted artist dies abroad |work= Pittsburgh Post-Gazette |place=Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania |date= May 27, 1937 |page= 17|url= https://www.newspapers.com/paper/pittsburgh-post-gazette/3518/}}</ref> for [[:File:Study for "Christ at the Home of Lazarus" MET DT4999.jpg|Christ at the Home of Lazarus]]<ref name=dewey1/> (This link is to the study, not the final painting).
*1922, France: Knighthood of the [[Legion of Honor#Membership|Legion of Honor]]<ref name=awards/> for his efforts in World War I, part of the Red Cross<ref name="PMA Cat">{{cite book|last1=Mosby|first1=Dewey F.|last2=Sewell|first2=Darrell|last3=Alexander-Minter|first3=Rae|title=Henry Ossawa Tanner: catalogue|date=1991|publisher=Philadelphia Museum of Art|location=Philadelphia, PA|isbn=0-87633-086-3|page=[https://archive.org/details/henryossawatanne0000mosb/page/32 32]|url=https://archive.org/details/henryossawatanne0000mosb/page/32}}</ref>
*1927, New York, National Arts Club: bronze medal for ''[[:File:Flight into Egypt (At the Gate), by Henry Ossawa Tanner.jpg|Flight into Egypt (At the Gates)]]''<ref name=dewey1/>
*1930, New York City, Grand Central Art Gallery: Walter L. Clark prize for ''[[:File:Etaples Fisher Folk by Henry Ossawa Tanner, 1923, High Museum of Art.jpg|Etaples Fisher Folk]]''<ref name=timeline/><ref name=dewey1/>


==Exhibitions==
==Exhibitions==
[[File:HenryOTanner.jpg|thumb|1973 U.S. commemorative stamp honoring Tanner.]]
[[File:HenryOTanner.jpg|thumb|1973 U.S. commemorative stamp honoring Tanner.]]


*1972. The Art of Henry Ossawa Tanner. Glen Falls, New York: The Hyde Collection.
* 1972: ''The Art of Henry Ossawa Tanner''. Glen Falls, New York: The Hyde Collection.
*1972. 19th Century American Landscape. New York: Metropolitan Museum of Art.
* 1972: ''19th Century American Landscape''. New York: Metropolitan Museum of Art.
*1976. Two Centuries of Black American Art. Los Angeles County Museum of Art.
* 1976: ''[[Two Centuries of Black American Art]]''. Los Angeles County Museum of Art.
*1989. Black Art Ancestral Legacy: The African Impulse in African-American Art. Dallas Museum of Art.
* 1989: ''Black Art Ancestral Legacy: The African Impulse in African-American Art''. Dallas Museum of Art.
*1993. Revisiting the White City: American Art at the 1893 World's Fair<ref name="Woods, Naurice Frank, Jr., Ph.D."/>
* 1993: ''Revisiting the White City: American Art at the 1893 World's Fair''<ref name="Woods, Naurice Frank, Jr., Ph.D."/>
*2010. Henry Ossawa Tanner and his Contemporaries,<ref>http://www.desmoinesartcenter.org/exhibitions/Henry-Ossawa-Tanner.aspx</ref> Des Moines Art Center (Dec.- Feb. 2011).
* 2010: ''Henry Ossawa Tanner and his Contemporaries'',<ref>[http://www.desmoinesartcenter.org/exhibitions/Henry-Ossawa-Tanner.aspx "Henry Ossawa Tanner and his Contemporaries"] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120419032850/http://www.desmoinesartcenter.org/exhibitions/Henry-Ossawa-Tanner.aspx |date=April 19, 2012 }}, Des Moines Art Center.</ref> Des Moines Art Center (December–February 2011).
*2012. Henry Ossawa Tanner: Modern Spirit,<ref>http://www.pafa.org/tanner/</ref> Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, Philadelphia (Jan. - Apr) then travelling to Cincinnati Art Museum<ref>http://www.cincinnatiartmuseum.org/explore/exhibitions/upcoming-exhibitions/1-the-exhibitions/357-henry-ossawa-tanner-modern-spirit</ref> (May - Sept.) and to [[Houston Museum of Fine Arts]] (Oct. - Jan. 2013)
* 2012: ''Henry Ossawa Tanner: Modern Spirit'',<ref>[https://www.pafa.org/museum/exhibitions/henry-ossawa-tanner-modern-spirit "Henry Ossawa Tanner: Modern Spirit"], PAFA.</ref> Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, Philadelphia (January–April), then to Cincinnati Art Museum<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.cincinnatiartmuseum.org/explore/exhibitions/upcoming-exhibitions/1-the-exhibitions/357-henry-ossawa-tanner-modern-spirit |title=Upcoming Exhibitions |access-date=April 1, 2015 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140703182649/http://www.cincinnatiartmuseum.org/explore/exhibitions/upcoming-exhibitions/1-the-exhibitions/357-henry-ossawa-tanner-modern-spirit |archive-date=July 3, 2014 }}</ref> (May–September) and to [[Houston Museum of Fine Arts]] (October–January 2013)

==Selected works==
[[File:Henry Ossawa Tanner's studio.jpg|thumb|450px|Tanner's studio]]

* ''Seascape-Jetty'' (c. 1876–78)
* ''[[:File:Pomp at the zoo, by Henry ossawa tanner.jpg|Pomp at the Zoo]]'' (1880). Private Collection
* ''[[:File:Joachim Leaving the Temple, by Henry Ossawa Tanner.jpg|Joachim Leaving the Temple]]'' (c. 1882–1888). [[Baltimore Museum of Art]]
* ''[[:File:Boy and Sheep Lying Under a Tree, by Henry Ossawa Tanner.jpg|Boy and Sheep Lying under a Tree]]'' (1881). Private Collection (On display at the [[Philadelphia Museum of Art]])
* ''[[:File:Henry Ossawa Tanner - Sand Dunes at Sunset, Atlantic City - Google Art Project.jpg|Sand Dunes at Sunset, Atlantic City]]'' (1886). Estate of [[Sadie Tanner Mossell Alexander|Sadie T. M. Alexander]] (On permanent display at the White House)
* ''[[The Bagpipe Lesson]]'' (1893). Hampton University Museum, Virginia
* ''[[The Banjo Lesson]]'' (1893). Hampton University Museum, Virginia
* ''[[The Thankful Poor]]'' (1894). Art Bridges<ref>{{Cite web |title=The Thankful Poor |url=https://artbridgesfoundation.org/artworks/tanner-the-thankful-poor |access-date=March 3, 2021 |website=Art Bridges}}</ref>
* ''[[The Young Sabot Maker]]'' (1895). [[Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art|The Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art, Kansas City, Missouri]]
* ''[[:File:Daniel in the Lions Den, from 1896 Salon catalog.jpg|Daniel in the Lions' Den]]'' (1895). [[Los Angeles County Museum of Art]]
* ''[[:File:Henry Ossawa Tanner, Resurrection of Lazarus.jpg|The Resurrection of Lazarus]]'' (1896). [[Musée d'Orsay]], Paris
* ''[[:File:Bishop Benjamin Tucker Tanner, by Henry Ossawa Tanner.jpg|Bishop Benjamin Tucker Tanner]]'' (1897). [[Baltimore Museum of Art]]
* ''[[Lions in the Desert]]'' (c. 1897–1900). [[Smithsonian American Art Museum]]
* ''[[The Annunciation (Tanner)|The Annunciation]]'' (1898). [[Philadelphia Museum of Art]], W.P. Wilstach Collection
* ''Moonlight Landscape'' (1898–1900). [[Muscarelle Museum of Art]], Williamsburg, VA.<ref name="Moonlight Landscape">{{cite web | year=2016 | title=Moonlight Landscape, (oil on canvas). | work=Art in Bloom | publisher=[[Muscarelle Museum of Art]] | url=https://proficio.campus.wm.edu/RediscoveryProficioPublicSearch/ShowItem.aspx?3371+ | access-date=June 20, 2018 }}{{Dead link|date=September 2023 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }}</ref>
* [[File:Henry Ossawa Tanner 1903.png|thumb|Portrait of Tanner by [[V. Floyd Campbell]]]]''[[:File:Henry Ossawa Tanner - The Good Shepherd - Google Art Project.jpg|The Good Shepherd]]'' (1903). [[Jane Voorhees Zimmerli Art Museum]], Rutgers University
* ''[[:File:Return of the Holy Women, Henry Ossawa Tanner, 1904.jpg|Return of the Holy Women]]'' (1904). Cedar Rapids Art Gallery, Iowa
* ''[[:File:Henry Ossawa Tanner - The Two Disciples at the Tomb - 1906.300 - Art Institute of Chicago.jpg|Two Disciples at the Tomb]]'' (1905–06). [[Art Institute of Chicago]]
* ''[http://64.136.229.66:8081/objects/4349/the-visitation?ctx=ad04b93195d4f8a41025c50fb947d45adc4bfd69&idx=0 The Visitation]'' (1909–10). [[Kalamazoo Institute of Arts]]
* ''[[:File:Henry Ossawa Tanner - The Holy Family.jpg|The Holy Family]]'' (1909–10). Muskegon Museum of Art, Michigan, Hackley Picture Fund
* ''[[:File:Moroccan Scene by Henry Ossawa Tanner - BMA.jpg|Moroccan Scene]]'' (about 1912). [[Birmingham Museum of Art]], Alabama
* ''[[:File:Palace of Justice, Tangier SAAM-1970.67 1.jpg|Palace of Justice, Tangier]]'' (1912–13). Smithsonian American Art Museum<ref name="WDL">{{cite web |url = http://www.wdl.org/en/item/512/ |title = Palace of Justice, Tangier, Morocco |website = [[World Digital Library]] |date = 1890–1900 |access-date =June 27, 2013}}</ref>
* ''Scene in Cairo''. [[Mabee-Gerrer Museum of Art]], Shawnee, Oklahoma

=== Other works ===
:''See: [[List of paintings by Henry Ossawa Tanner with events in his life]]''

<gallery widths="170" heights="200">
File:Pomp at the zoo, by Henry ossawa tanner.jpg|''Pomp at the zoo'', circa 1880
File:Pomp at the Philadelphia Zoo.jpg|''Pomp at the Philadelphia Zoo'', circa 1880-1886
File:Sister Sarah, by Henry Ossawa Tanner.jpg|''Sister Sarah'', 1882.
File:Woman from the West Indies, by Henry Ossawa Tanner.webp|''[[Woman from the West Indies]]'', 1891, Brittany, France.<ref>{{cite web |title= Henry Ossawa Tanner Lot 41: Henry Ossawa Tanner, (American, 1859-1937), Woman from the French West Indies, c. 1891|url= https://www.invaluable.com/auction-lot/henry-ossawa-tanner-american-1859-1937-woman-from-41-c-bbe7af3fd7 |quote= The artist arrived in Paris, France at this time and spent the summers on the west coast in Brittany. There, he adopted a predominately green palette with an emphasis on vertical brushstrokes as can be seen in the Woman from the French West Indies...we are looking at an image of a light-skinned woman from one of the islands of the French West Indies-Martinique, Guadeloupe or Dominica. This claim is supported by her costume and headdress. }}</ref>
Henry Ossawa Tanner - The Bagpipe Lesson.jpg|''[[The Bagpipe Lesson]]'', 1893
File:Henry Ossawa Tanner - The Young Sabot Maker - Google Art Project.jpg|''[[The Young Sabot Maker]]'', 1895
File:Marshes in New Jersey, by Henry Ossawa Tanner. SAAM-1984.149.3 1.jpg|1895. ''Marshes in New Jersey''; possibly the "pastel of New Jersey coast by moonlight" exhibited at the 1895 Salon with ''The Young Sabot Maker''.<ref name=dewey1/>
File:The Annunciation to the Shepards, Henry Ossawa Tanner.jpg|''The Annunciation to the Shepherds'', c. 1895
File:Resurrection of Lazarus by Henry Ossawa Tanner.jpg|''[[The Resurrection of Lazarus]]'', 1896. Won medal in 1897 Paris Salon, bought by French government.
File:View of the Seine Looking Toward Notre Dame, by Henry Ossawa Tanner.jpg|''View of the Seine, looking toward Notre Dame'', 1896
File:Nicodemus Visiting Jesus, by Henry Ossawa Tanner adjusted3.jpg|''Jesus and Nicodemus'', 1899. Displayed at Paris Salon and Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts, where it won a Walter Lippincott Prize.
File:Henry Ossawa Tanner - Salome 1900.jpg|''[[Salome (Henry Ossawa Tanner)|Salome]]'', circa 1900. The body of [[John the Baptist]] lies at her feet.
File:Henry Ossawa Tanner - Abraham's Oak - Google Art Project.jpg|''[[Abraham's Oak (painting)|Abraham's Oak]]'', 1905. Biblical subject, also called the [[Oak of Mamre]].
File:The Savior SAAM-1983.95.191 1.jpg|''The Savior'', 1900–1905
File:Christ in the home of Mary and Martha, Henry Ossawa Tanner.jpg|''Christ in the home of Mary and Martha'', 1905
File:The Disciples See Christ Walking on the Water, by Henry Ossawa Tanner.jpg|''The Disciples See Christ Walking on the Water'', c. 1907
File:Henry Ossawa Tanner - Angels Appearing before the Shepherds.jpg|''Angels Appearing before the Shepherds'', c. 1910
File:Christ walking on the water, Henry Ossawa Tanner.jpg|''Christ walking on the water''. Engraving, possibly a show catalog, 1910.
File:Three Marys, Henry Ossawa Tanner.jpg|''The Three Marys'' (at Jesus' tomb), 1910. Entered in the 1910 Salon. (From left) [[Mary Magdalene]], [[Mary, mother of Jesus]], [[Salome (disciple)|Mary Salome]]
File:Henry Ossawa Tanner - 'A View of Fez', c. 1912, High Museum.JPG|''A View of Fez'', c. 1912
File:Henry Ossawa Tanner - Fishermen at Sea.jpg|''Fishermen at Sea'', c. 1913
File:Mary, by Henry Ossawa Tanner.webp| ''Mary'', 1914
File:Henry Ossawa Tanner - Coastal Landscape, France.jpg|''Coastal Landscape'', France, 1919
File:Daniel in the Lions' Den LACMA 22.6.3.jpg|''Daniel in the Lions' Den'', 1907–1918. The original (now lost) was painted in 1895 and displayed in the 1896 Salon.<ref name=marcia2>{{cite book |title= Henry Ossawa Tanner, American artist |author= Mathews, Marcia M |date= 1969 |publisher=University of Chicago Press |place= Chicago |pages= 69–74 |url=https://archive.org/details/henryossawatanne0000unse_v5o9/page/64/mode/2up}}</ref><ref>{{cite magazine |title= The Story of an Artist's Life: II Recognition |author= Henry Ossawa Tanner|magazine= The World's Work |date= July 1909 |volume= 18 |issue= 3 |publisher= Open Court Publishing Co|page= 11772 |quote= In 1895, I painted "Daniel in Lions' Den."...It was exhibited in the Salon of 1896.. |url= https://archive.org/details/sim_worlds-work_1909-07_18_3/page/11772/mode/1up}}</ref>
File:Return from the Crucifixion, by Henry Ossawa Tanner.jpg|1936. Tanner's final painting, ''Return from the Crucifixion''. Mary and Joseph are in the front.
</gallery>
<gallery widths="390px" heights="200px">
File:Henry Ossawa Tanner - Sand Dunes at Sunset, Atlantic City - Google Art Project.jpg|''Sand Dunes at Sunset, Atlantic City'', c. 1885, the [[White House]].
File:Destruction of Sodom and Gomorrah by Henry Ossawa Tanner, 1929-30, High Museum of Art.jpg|''Destruction of Sodom and Gomorrah'', 1929–30, [[High Museum of Art]]
</gallery>


==See also==
==See also==
*[[African American art]]
* [[African-American art]]
* [[List of Orientalist artists]]
*[[Realism (arts)]]
* [[Orientalism]]
* [[Realism (arts)]]


==Notes==
== References ==
{{Reflist}}
{{Reflist}}

==Further reading==
* Anna O. Marley, ed. Henry Ossawa Tanner: Modern Spirit (University of California Press: 2012).
* Marcia M. Matthews, Henry Ossawa Tanner: American Artist (University of Chicago Press: 1995).
* Kristin Schwain, Signs of Grace: Religion and American Art in the Gilded Age (Cornell University Press: 2007).
* Will South, “A Missing Question Mark: The Unknown Henry Ossawa Tanner,” Nineteenth-Century Art Worldwide, vol. 8. issue 2 (Autumn 2009).
* Judith Wilson, “Lifting ‘The Veil’: Henry O. Tanner’s The Banjo Lesson and The Thankful Poor,” Contributions in Black Studies: A Journal of African and Afro-American Studies, volume 9, article 4.


==External links==
==External links==
{{Commons category}}
{{Commons category}}
* [http://clinton2.nara.gov/WH/EOP/First_Lady/html/hot-bio.html White House Biography]
* [https://web.archive.org/web/20110527044240/http://clinton2.nara.gov/WH/EOP/First_Lady/html/hot-bio.html White House Biography]
* [http://www.springfieldart.museum/content/view/127/164/ Springfield Museum of Art Biography]
* [https://web.archive.org/web/20080530020919/http://www.springfieldart.museum/content/view/127/164/ Springfield Museum of Art Biography]
* [http://esperstamps.org/aa8.htm Ebony Society of Philatelic Events and Reflections Biography]
* [https://web.archive.org/web/20060829020120/http://esperstamps.org/aa8.htm Ebony Society of Philatelic Events and Reflections Biography]
* [http://www.muskegonartmuseum.org/permanent005.htm Muskegon Museum of Art]
* [https://web.archive.org/web/20080521062049/http://www.muskegonartmuseum.org/permanent005.htm Muskegon Museum of Art]
* [http://www.pbs.org/wnet/ihas/icon/tanner.html Profile at PBS.org]
* [https://www.pbs.org/wnet/ihas/icon/tanner.html Profile at PBS.org]
* [https://web.archive.org/web/20120424215536/http://www.pafa.org/Shop/Portfolio-Online/Products/Product-Detail/404/categoryid--21/productid--285/ ''Henry Ossawa Tanner: Modern Spirit''] (University of California Press, 2012)—the most complete scholarly publication to date produced in conjunction with the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts (PAFA), Tanner's alma mater
* [http://www.artsbma.org/collectionitemdetails?searchlayout=grid&showform=0&ordering=popular&searchphrase=exact&areas%5B0%5D=portfolio&searchartistname=Henry%20Ossawa%20Tanner,%20United%20States,%20(1859-1937)&areas%5B%5D=portfolio&searchlayout=details&limit=1&start=0 ''Moroccan Scene''] at the [[Birmingham Museum of Art]]
* [https://americanart.si.edu/artist/henry-ossawa-tanner-4742 Biographical sketch and gallery] at the [[Smithsonian American Art Museum]]
* University of California Press [http://www.pafa.org/Shop/Portfolio-Online/Products/Product-Detail/404/categoryid--21/productid--285/ ''Henry Ossawa Tanner: Modern Spirit''] (2012) the most complete scholarly publication to date produced in conjunction with PAFA, Tanner's Alma Mater, the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts

; Art online
* [https://www.artsbma.org/moroccan-scene/ ''Moroccan Scene''] at the [[Birmingham Museum of Art]]

'''[[Archives of American Art]]'''
'''[[Archives of American Art]]'''
* [http://www.aaa.si.edu/collectionsonline/tannhenr/ Henry Ossawa Tanner Papers]
* [https://www.aaa.si.edu/collections/henry-ossawa-tanner-papers-9229 Henry Ossawa Tanner Papers]
* [http://www.aaa.si.edu/collections/alexander-family-papers-relating-to-henry-ossawa-tanner-10243 Alexander family papers relating to Henry Ossawa Tanner, 1912-1985]
* [http://www.aaa.si.edu/collections/alexander-family-papers-relating-to-henry-ossawa-tanner-10243 Alexander family papers relating to Henry Ossawa Tanner, 1912–1985]
* [http://www.pafa.org/Museum/Exhibitions/Currently-On-View/Henry-Ossawa-Tanner-Modern-Spirit/Henry-Ossawa-Tanner-Modern-Spirit-Gallery-of-Images-and-Letters-from-the-PAFA-Archives/1278/ Gallery of images and letters from the PAFA archives]
* [http://www.pafa.org/Museum/Exhibitions/Currently-On-View/Henry-Ossawa-Tanner-Modern-Spirit/Henry-Ossawa-Tanner-Modern-Spirit-Gallery-of-Images-and-Letters-from-the-PAFA-Archives/1278/ Gallery of images and letters from the PAFA archives] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120403075329/http://www.pafa.org/Museum/Exhibitions/Currently-On-View/Henry-Ossawa-Tanner-Modern-Spirit/Henry-Ossawa-Tanner-Modern-Spirit-Gallery-of-Images-and-Letters-from-the-PAFA-Archives/1278/ |date=April 3, 2012 }}
*[https://www.aaa.si.edu/collections/henry-ossawa-tanner-papers-9229 Henry Ossawa Tanner papers, 1860s–1978, bulk 1890–1937]. Archives of American Art, Smithsonian Institution.


{{Henry Ossawa Tanner}}
{{Authority control|VIAF=64813803}}
{{Authority control}}


{{Persondata <!-- Metadata: see [[Wikipedia:Persondata]]. -->
| NAME =Tanner, Henry Ossawa
| ALTERNATIVE NAMES =
| SHORT DESCRIPTION = American artist
| DATE OF BIRTH =1859-06-21
| PLACE OF BIRTH =[[Pittsburgh]], [[Pennsylvania]]
| DATE OF DEATH =1937-05-25
| PLACE OF DEATH =Paris, France
}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Tanner, Henry Ossawa}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Tanner, Henry Ossawa}}
[[Category:1859 births]]
[[Category:1937 deaths]]
[[Category:19th-century American painters]]
[[Category:19th-century American painters]]
[[Category:19th-century American male artists]]
[[Category:20th-century American painters]]
[[Category:20th-century American painters]]
[[Category:Modern painters]]
[[Category:Académie Julian alumni]]
[[Category:Artists from Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania]]
[[Category:African-American diaspora in Paris]]
[[Category:Robeson-Bustill family]]
[[Category:African-American painters]]
[[Category:Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts alumni]]
[[Category:American diaspora in Europe]]
[[Category:African-American artists]]
[[Category:American expatriates in France]]
[[Category:American expatriates in France]]
[[Category:Alumni of the Académie Julian]]
[[Category:American male painters]]
[[Category:1859 births]]
[[Category:American modern painters]]
[[Category:1937 deaths]]
[[Category:American Orientalist painters]]
[[Category:World Digital Library related]]
[[Category:American realist painters]]
[[Category:Christian artists]]
[[Category:Knights of the Legion of Honour]]
[[Category:National Academy of Design members]]
[[Category:National Academy of Design members]]
[[Category:Painters from Pittsburgh]]
[[Category:Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts alumni]]
[[Category:Students of Thomas Eakins]]
[[Category:Tanner family of Pennsylvania]]

Latest revision as of 08:27, 6 November 2024

Henry Ossawa Tanner
Tanner in 1907 by Frederick Gutekunst
Born(1859-06-21)June 21, 1859
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, U.S.
DiedMay 25, 1937(1937-05-25) (aged 77)
Paris, France
EducationStudied with Thomas Eakins at the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts. Later studied with Jean Paul Laurens and Jean-Joseph Benjamin-Constant at the Académie Julian in Paris, France.
Known forPainting and drawing
Notable work
MovementAmerican Realism, French Academic, Impressionism, Symbolism
Spouse
Jessie Macauley Olssen
(m. 1899; died 1925)
Children1
AwardsPennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts' Lippincott Prize, 1900; Silver medal, Exposition Universelle, Paris, 1900
ElectedElected a member of the National Academy of Design, 1910. Made an honorary chevalier of the Order of the Legion of Honor, 1923.
Patron(s)Joseph Crane Hartzell, Rodman Wanamaker, Atherton Curtis

Henry Ossawa Tanner (June 21, 1859 – May 25, 1937) was an American artist who spent much of his career in France. He became the first African-American painter to gain international acclaim.[1] Tanner moved to Paris, France, in 1891 to study at the Académie Julian and gained acclaim in French artistic circles. In 1923, the French government elected Tanner chevalier of the Legion of Honor.[2][3]

Early life

[edit]

Henry Ossawa Tanner was born in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.[4] His father Benjamin Tucker Tanner (1835–1923) became a bishop in the African Methodist Episcopal Church (AME), the first independent black denomination in the United States. He was educated at Avery College and Western Theological Seminary in Pittsburgh, and developed a literary career.[5] In addition, he was a political activist, supporting abolition of slavery. Henry Tanner's mother Sarah Elizabeth Tanner may have been born into slavery in Virginia.[6][7] Two different stories have emerged concerning her living in freedom; in one, her father drives the family from Winchester, Virginia to "the free state of Pennsylvania" in an ox cart.[6] In the other, she escapes as a refugee to the North via the Underground Railroad.[7] There she met and married Benjamin Tucker Tanner.[6]

Tanner was the first of at least five[4] children, and two of his brothers, Benjamin and Horace, died in infancy.[8] One of his sisters, Halle Tanner Dillon Johnson, was the first woman to be certified to practice medicine in Alabama.[9] His parents gave him a middle name that commemorated the struggle at Osawatomie between pro- and anti-slavery partisans.[10] The family moved from Pittsburgh to Philadelphia when Tanner was a teenager.[11] There his father became a friend of Frederick Douglass, sometimes supporting him, sometimes criticizing.[12] Robert Douglass, Jr., a successful black artist in Philadelphia, was an early neighbor of the Tanner family, and Tanner wrote that he "used to pass and always stopped to look at his pictures in the window."[13] When Tanner was about 13 years old, he saw a landscape painter working in Fairmount Park, where he was walking with his father. He decided that he wanted to be a painter.[8]

Education

[edit]
Spinning By Firelight, 1894

Although many white artists refused to accept an African-American apprentice, in 1879 Tanner enrolled at the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts in Philadelphia, becoming the only black student.[12] His decision to attend the school came at a time when art academies increasingly focused on study from live models rather than plaster casts. Thomas Eakins, a professor at the Pennsylvania Academy, was one of the first American artists to promote new approaches to artistic education including increased study from live models, discussion of anatomy in classes of both male and female students, and dissections of cadavers to teach anatomy. Eakins's progressive approach to art education had a profound effect on Tanner. The young artist was one of Eakins' favorite students; two decades after Tanner left the Academy, Eakins painted his portrait.[14]

At the Academy, Tanner befriended artists with whom he kept in contact throughout the rest of his life, most notably Robert Henri, one of the founders of the Ashcan School. During a relatively short time at the Academy, Tanner developed a thorough knowledge of anatomy and the skill to express his understanding of the weight and structure of the human figure on the canvas.[15]

Tanner's artistic studies were disrupted by illness, which was reported in November 1881 and said to have persisted into the following summer, when Tanner spent time recovering in the Adirondack mountains.[16]

Tanner's teachers included Thomas Eakins (American realism, photography), Thomas Hovenden (American realism), Benjamin Constant (orientalist paintings and portraits, French academic) and Jean-Paul Laurens (history painting, French academic).[17][18]

Painting style

[edit]
The Annunciation, 1898, Philadelphia Museum of Art

Tanner painted landscapes, religious subjects, and scenes of daily life in a realistic style that echoed that of Eakins.[19][20] While works like The Banjo Lesson depicted everyday scenes of African American life, Tanner later painted religious subjects.[21] It is likely that Tanner's father, a minister in the African Methodist Episcopal Church, was a formative influence for him.[15]

Tanner was not limited to one specific approach to painting and drawing. His works reflect at times meticulous attention to detail and loose, expressive brushstrokes in others. Often both methods are employed simultaneously. Tanner was also interested in the effects that color could have in a painting.[22] Warmer compositions such as The Resurrection of Lazarus (1896) and The Annunciation (1898) express the intensity and fire of religious moments, and the elation of transcendence between the divine and humanity. Other paintings emphasize cool hues, which became dominant in his work after the mid-1890s. A palette of indigo and turquoise—referred to as the "Tanner blues"—characterizes works such as The Three Marys (1910), Gateway (1912) and The Arch (1919).[23] Works such as The Good Shepherd (1903) and Return of the Holy Women (1904) evoke a feeling of somber religiosity and introspection.

Tanner often experimented with light in his works, which at times adds symbolic meaning. In The Annunciation (1898), for example, the archangel Gabriel is represented as a column of light that forms, together with the shelf in the upper left corner, a cross.[24]

Issues of racism

[edit]

Although Tanner gained confidence as an artist and began to sell his work, he faced racism working as a professional artist in Philadelphia.[25] In his autobiography, The Story of an Artist's Life, Tanner described the burden of racism:

I was extremely timid and to be made to feel that I was not wanted, although in a place where I had every right to be, even months afterwards caused me sometimes weeks of pain. Every time any one of these disagreeable incidents came into my mind, my heart sank, and I was anew tortured by the thought of what I had endured, almost as much as the incident itself.[26]

In the hope of earning enough money to travel to Europe, Tanner operated a photography studio in Atlanta during the late 1880s. The venture was unsuccessful. During this period Tanner met Bishop Joseph Crane Hartzell, a trustee of Clark College (now Clark Atlanta University). Hartzell and his wife befriended Tanner, became his patrons, and recommended him for a teaching job at the college.[27] Tanner taught drawing at Clark College for a short period.[21]

1891

[edit]

Tanner set out for Rome by way of Liverpool and Paris on the ship City of Chester on 4 January 1891.[28] He found Paris to his liking and discovered the Académie Julian, where he began his studies in France.[29] He also joined the American Art Students Club. Paris was a welcome escape for Tanner; within French art circles, race mattered little.Tanner discovered the Paris Salon and set a goal to get his artwork accepted.[29]

The Banjo Lesson

[edit]
The Banjo Lesson, 1893

On a return visit to the United States in 1893, Tanner presented, “The American Negro in Art,” an essay, at the World’s Congress on Africa in Chicago,[4] and painted The Banjo Lesson, one of his most recognized works that began as a series of sketches of Black people living in Appalachia.[30] The painting shows an elderly black man teaching a boy, assumed to be his grandson, how to play the banjo.[23][31] The image of a black man playing the banjo appears throughout American art of the late 19th century. [32][31]

Life in Paris

[edit]

Except for occasional brief returns home, Tanner spent the rest of his life in Paris. He acclimated quickly to Parisian life, and became friends with Atherton Curtis.[33][34] He was part of a community of artists in Mount Kisco, New York for six months in 1902, at the behest of Curtis, and returned the following winter.[35]

Atherton Curtis with his wife, by Tanner.

In Paris, Tanner continued his studies under renowned artists such as Jean Joseph Benjamin Constant and Jean-Paul Laurens.[26] With their guidance, he began to establish a reputation in France. He settled at the Étaples art colony in Normandy. There he was introduced to many artists whose works would affect his approach to art. At the Louvre, he encountered and studied the works of Gustave Courbet, Jean-Baptiste Chardin and Louis Le Nain.[31] These artists had painted scenes of ordinary people in their environment, and the influence in Tanner's work is noticeable. That of Courbet's The Stone Breakers (1850; destroyed) can be seen in the similarities in Tanner's The Young Sabot Maker (1895). Both paintings explore the themes of apprenticeship and manual labor.[31]

Earlier, Tanner had painted marine scenes of man's struggle with the sea, but by 1895 he was creating mostly religious works. His shift to painting biblical scenes occurred as he was undergoing a spiritual struggle. In a letter he wrote to his parents on Christmas 1896, he stated, "I have made up my mind to serve Him [God] more faithfully."[36] A transitional work from this period is the recently rediscovered painting of a fishing boat tossed on the waves, which is held by the Smithsonian American Art Museum.[37]

Tanner's painting Daniel in the Lions' Den was accepted into the 1896 Salon.[15] Later that year he painted The Resurrection of Lazarus (1896, Musée d'Orsay, Paris) that was purchased by the French government after winning the third-place medal at the 1897 Salon.[38] Upon seeing The Resurrection of Lazarus,[39] Rodman Wanamaker, an art critic and a "major patron of contemporary religious art,"[40] offered to pay all the expenses for Tanner to visit the Middle East.[15] Wanamaker felt that any serious painter of biblical scenes needed to see the environment firsthand and that a painter of Tanner's caliber was well worth the investment. Tanner accepted Wanamaker's offer.[40] For four months in 1897 and, again, for six months in 1898-1899, he trekked a popular tourist route through Palestine and North Africa, pitching his tent in the arid region.[40]

Tanner did not exhibit at the Salon in 1907, due to eye strain, but in 1908 entered The Wise and Foolish Virgins which he worked on in 1906, 1907 and finished in 1908. Newspapers don't record a Salon entry for 1909; but he focused his 1908 energy on a one-man exhibition of his artwork in New York, and the 1909 papers continued to talk about that event. Tanner may have avoided displaying at the Salon 1910, 1911, 1912, and 1913.[41]

In 1914, Tanner's mother died,[42] World War I started, and he returned to the Paris Salon after "several years of absence," bringing his 1912 painting Christ in the House of Lazarus and Mary.[43][42] He had remarked in 1910 "that he would not exhibit in the salon again as they had stuck his picture into a corner which everyone knows is almost an insult."[41] French artists were upset over a U.S. tariff on their paintings, and said to be taking revenge in the Salon.[41]

Later years

[edit]
Sodom and Gomorrah, 1920

During World War I, Tanner worked for the Red Cross Public Information Department, during which time he also painted images from the front lines of the war.[44] His works featuring African-American troops were rare during the war. In 1923 the French state made him a knight of the Legion of Honour for his work as an artist.

Tanner met with fellow African-American artist Palmer Hayden in Paris circa 1927. They discussed artistic technique and he gave Hayden advice on interacting with French society.[45] He was also an inspiration to other artists studying in France, including Hale Woodruff, Romare Bearden, and other artists associated with Black Abstractionism.[17]

Several of Tanner's paintings were purchased by Atlanta art collector J. J. Haverty, who founded Haverty Furniture Co. and was instrumental in establishing the High Museum of Art. Tanner's Étaples Fisher Folk is among several paintings from the Haverty collection now in the High Museum's permanent collection.

Tanner died peacefully at his home in Paris, France, on May 25, 1937.[44] He is buried at Sceaux Cemetery in Sceaux, Hauts-de-Seine, a suburb of Paris.

Marriage and family

[edit]
The Tanner family at home in France. Handwritten note on verso identifies the individuals seated at the table as: Jesse Tanner, Mrs. Tanner, Myron G. Barlow, Henry Ossawa Tanner.

In 1899 he married Jessie Olsson, a Swedish-American opera singer.[46] A contemporary, Virginia Walker Course, described their relationship as one of equal talents, but racist attitudes insisted the relationship was unequal:

Fan, did you ever hear of a miss [sic] Olsson of Portland? She has a beautiful voice I believe and came to Paris to cultivate it and she has married a darkey artist ... He is an awefully [sic] talented man but he is black. ... She seems like a well educated girl and really very nice but it makes me sick to see a cultivated woman marry a man like that. I don't know his work but he is very talented they say.[47]

Jessie Tanner died in 1925, twelve years before her husband, and he grieved her deeply through the 1920s. He sold the family home in Les Charmes where they had been so happy together. They are buried next to each other in Sceaux, Hauts-de-Seine.[48]

They had a son, Jesse, who survived Tanner at his death.[21]

Friends and colleagues

[edit]

Tanner's friends and colleagues included Hermon MacNeil (sculptor), Hermann Dudley Murphy (landscapes), Paul Gauguin (synthetism), Myron G. Barlow (genre painting), Charles Hovey Pepper (Japanese style woodblocks). Charles Filiger (symbolist), Armand Séguin (Post-Impressionism), Jan Verkade (Post-Impressionism, Christian symbolist), Paul Sérusier (abstract art), and Gustave Loiseau (Post-Impressionism).[17][49][50]

Legacy

[edit]
Tanner's The Seine (c. 1902), one of three paintings by African Americans on display in 2012 in the National Gallery of Art's American Art galleries.[51]

Tanner's work was influential during his career; he has been called "the greatest African American painter to date."[52] The early paintings of William Edouard Scott, who studied with Tanner in France, show the influence of Tanner's technique.[31] In addition, some of Norman Rockwell's illustrations deal with the same themes and compositions that Tanner pursued. Rockwell's proposed cover of the Literary Digest in 1922, for example, shows an older black man playing the banjo for his grandson. The light sources are nearly identical to those in Tanner's Banjo Lesson. A fireplace illuminates the right side of the picture, while natural light enters from the left. Both use similar objects as well such as the clothing, chair, crumpled hat on the floor.[31] Some other major artists Tanner mentored include William A. Harper and Hale Woodruff.[8]

Tanner's Sand Dunes at Sunset, Atlantic City (c. 1885; oil on canvas) hangs in the Green Room at the White House; it is the first painting by an African-American artist to have been purchased for the permanent collection of the White House. The painting is a landscape with a "view across the cool gray of a shadowed beach to dunes made pink by the late afternoon sunlight. A low haze over the water partially hides the sun." It was bought for $100,000 by the White House Endowment Fund during the Bill Clinton administration from Dr. Rae Alexander-Minter, grandniece of the artist.[53]

His correspondence with Curtis between 1904 and 1937 is held at the Smithsonian Institution.[54]

Tanner's work was included in the 2015 exhibition We Speak: Black Artists in Philadelphia, 1920s-1970s at the Woodmere Art Museum.[55]

Awards

[edit]
Photo of Tanner's lost painting, Daniel in the Lion's Den, 1896.

Exhibitions

[edit]
1973 U.S. commemorative stamp honoring Tanner.
  • 1972: The Art of Henry Ossawa Tanner. Glen Falls, New York: The Hyde Collection.
  • 1972: 19th Century American Landscape. New York: Metropolitan Museum of Art.
  • 1976: Two Centuries of Black American Art. Los Angeles County Museum of Art.
  • 1989: Black Art Ancestral Legacy: The African Impulse in African-American Art. Dallas Museum of Art.
  • 1993: Revisiting the White City: American Art at the 1893 World's Fair[32]
  • 2010: Henry Ossawa Tanner and his Contemporaries,[63] Des Moines Art Center (December–February 2011).
  • 2012: Henry Ossawa Tanner: Modern Spirit,[64] Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, Philadelphia (January–April), then to Cincinnati Art Museum[65] (May–September) and to Houston Museum of Fine Arts (October–January 2013)

Selected works

[edit]
Tanner's studio

Other works

[edit]
See: List of paintings by Henry Ossawa Tanner with events in his life

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "Henry Ossawa Tanner". Archived from the original on May 27, 2011. Retrieved August 5, 2006.
  2. ^ "Artist Info". www.nga.gov. Retrieved November 25, 2021.
  3. ^ Mosby, Dewey F. (1991). Henry Ossawa Tanner. Philadelphia Museum of Art. Philadelphia; New York: Philadelphia Museum of Art; Rizzoli International Publications. p. 50. ISBN 978-0-8478-1346-9.
  4. ^ a b c Henry Ossawa Tanner. American, 1859 - 1937. National Gallery of Art. https://www.nga.gov/collection/artist-info.1919.html
  5. ^ The Civil War in America: Benjamin Tucker Tanner, Library of Congress Exhibitions
  6. ^ a b c Homespun Heroines and other women of distinction. New York: Oxford University Press. 1988. pp. 32–33.
  7. ^ a b "Mother of Henry O. Tanner". Smithsonian American Art Museum.
  8. ^ a b c Woods, Naurice Frank (2018). Henry Ossawa Tanner Art, Faith, Race, and Legacy. New York, NY: Taylor and Francis. ISBN 978-1-138-24194-7.
  9. ^ Wright, A. J. (May 18, 2017). "Halle Tanner Dillon". Encyclopedia of Alabama. Retrieved November 8, 2020.
  10. ^ Kelly Jeanette Baker (2003). "Race, Religion, and Visual Mysticism". Florida State University.
  11. ^ Angelica Villa (November 29, 2022). "Preservationists Move to Save Painter Henry Ossawa Tanner's Childhood Home in Philadelphia". ARTnews.
  12. ^ a b Finkelman, Paul, ed. (2006). Encyclopedia of African American History 1619–1895. Vol. 3. New York: Oxford University Press. p. 224.
  13. ^ Tanner, Henry Ossawa; Marley, Anna O. (2012). Henry Ossawa Tanner: Modern Spirit. Univ of California Press. p. 19. ISBN 978-0-520-27074-9.
  14. ^ Parry, Ellwood C. III. Three Nineteenth Century Afro-American Artists. Cedar Rapids, IA: Cedar Rapids Art Center, 1980.
  15. ^ a b c d Matthews, Marcia. Henry Ossawa Tanner: American Artist. Chicago: The University of Chicago Press, 1969.
  16. ^ Woods, Naurice Frank Jr. (July 6, 2017). Henry Ossawa Tanner: Art, Faith, Race, and Legacy. Taylor & Francis. p. 29. ISBN 978-1-315-27948-0.
  17. ^ a b c Mosby, Dewey F. (1991). Henry Ossawa Tanner. Philadelphia Museum of Art. Philadelphia; New York: Philadelphia Museum of Art; Rizzoli International Publications. pp. 20–21, 59, 90. 93. ISBN 978-0-8478-1346-9.
  18. ^ Schantz, Michael (October–November 2005). "Thomas Hovenden: American Painter of Hearth and Homeland". American Art Review. Archived from the original on June 16, 2011. [note: reprinted in Resource Library on April 22, 2009, with permission of the author and the Woodmere Art Museum, which was granted to TFAO on April 1, 2009]
  19. ^ "Henry Ossawa Tanner Online". Retrieved August 5, 2006.
  20. ^ "Realism – Realism Art". Archived from the original on October 7, 2009. Retrieved August 5, 2006.
  21. ^ a b c "Henry Ossawa Tanner". Springfield Museum of Art. Archived from the original on January 10, 2006. Retrieved August 5, 2006.
  22. ^ Kettlewell, James K. The Art of Henry Ossawa Tanner. Glen Falls, NY: The Hyde Collection, 1975.
  23. ^ a b Farrington, Lisa (2017). African-American Art A visual and Cultural History. New York, New York: Oxford University Press. pp. 97–98. ISBN 978-0-19-999539-4.
  24. ^ "Teacher Resources: The Annunciation" (PDF). The Annunciation, Henry Ossawa Tanner. Philadelphia Museum of Art. Retrieved June 6, 2016.
  25. ^ "Henry Ossawa Tanner | Smithsonian American Art Museum". americanart.si.edu. Retrieved June 4, 2021.
  26. ^ a b Bruce, Marcus C. Henry Ossawa Tanner. New York: Crossroad Publishing, 2002.
  27. ^ Matthews, Marcia (1994). Henry Ossawa Tanner: American Artist. Chicago: The University of Chicago Press. p. 36. ISBN 0-226-51006-9.
  28. ^ Tanner, Henry Ossawa (July 1909). "Story of an artist's life I." The World's Work. 18 (3): 11666.
  29. ^ a b Tanner, Henry Ossawa (July 1909). "Story of an artist's life II. Recognition". The World's Work. 18 (3): 11770. As I now look back, it seems curious to me that I should have been able to arrive at thirty years of age with two years of that time in Paris and never to have heard of the Salon or, having heard of it, not to have at all realized its importance in the Art world... What a surprise awaited me in the court of that old palais! Hundreds of statues that appeared to me nearly all of them fairer than the "Venus de Milo" and upstairs the paintings — thousands of them — and nearly all of them much more to my taste than were the old masters of the Louvre... Here was something to work for, to get a picture here. This now furnished a definite impetus to my work in Paris — to be able to make a picture that should be admitted here — could I do it?
  30. ^ Khalid, Farisa. Henry Ossawa Tanner, The Banjo Lesson. SmartHistory. The Center for Public Art History. https://smarthistory.org/tanner-banjo/
  31. ^ a b c d e f Shaw, Thomas M. What Manner of Men? A Reconsideration across the Synapses of Art History of Three Paintings and their Images of Men of African Descent. Lanham, MD: University Press of America, 1997.
  32. ^ a b Woods, Naurice Frank, Jr., Ph.D. Insuperable Obstacles: The Impact of the Creative and Personal Development of Four Nineteenth Century African American Artists. The Union Institute, 1993.
  33. ^ Woods, Naurice Frank Jr. (2018). Henry Ossawa Tanner: Art, Faith, Race, and Legacy. Taylor & Francis. ISBN 978-1-315-27948-0.
  34. ^ Bearden, Romare; Henderson, Harry Brinton (1972). Six Black Masters of American Art. Zenith Books. p. 55. ISBN 978-0-385-01211-9.
  35. ^ "Atherton Curtis letter to Jessie Tanner after the death of H. O. Tanner in 1937".
  36. ^ Woods, Naurice Frank. "Embarking on a New Covenant: Henry Ossawa Tanner's Spiritual Crisis of 1896." American Art, vol. 27, no. 1, 2013, pp. 94–103. JSTOR, www.jstor.org/stable/10.1086/670686.
  37. ^ Details on the museum site
  38. ^ "Negro Artist site". Negroartist.com. Retrieved December 14, 2013.
  39. ^ "Negro Artist site". Negroartist.com. Retrieved December 14, 2013.
  40. ^ a b c Richmond-Moll, Jeffrey. Souvenir from the Holy Land: On Henry Ossawa Tanner’s Abraham’s Oak. Smithsonian American Art Museum. https://americanart.si.edu/blog/art-bites-tanners-abrahams-oak
  41. ^ a b c "Artists Allege Discrimination out of Revenge". The Montreal Star. Montreal, Quebec, Canada. July 2, 1910. p. 3.
  42. ^ a b Tanner, Henry Ossawa. Mary, ca. 1914, oil on canvas, 45 1⁄2 x 34 3⁄4 in. (115.5 x 88.2 cm.), Smithsonian American Art Museum, Gift of Mrs. Dorothy L. McGuire, 1991.102. https://americanart.si.edu/artwork/mary-32409
  43. ^ Mosby, Dewey F. Henry Ossawa Tanner. First trade edition. Philadelphia, PA : Philadelphia Museum of Art ; New York, NY : Rizzoli International Publications. 1991.
  44. ^ a b "Henry Ossawa Tanner". Archived from the original on August 29, 2006. Retrieved August 9, 2006.
  45. ^ Finkelman, Paul, ed. (2009). Encyclopedia of African American History (1896 to the present). Vol. 2. New York: Oxford University Press. p. 393.
  46. ^ Marley, Anna O. "Introduction" in Modern Spirit Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts. Philadelphia. 2012.
  47. ^ Course, Virginia Walker qtd. by Jean-Claude Lesage in "Tanner, the Pillar of Trepied". Modern Spirit. Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts. Philadelphia. 2012, p. 88.
  48. ^ Marley (2012), p. 41.
  49. ^ "Henry Ossawa Tanner papers, 1860s-1978, bulk 1890-1937 311: Photographs of Artwork, circa 1920s". Smithsonian Archives of American Art. [note: image download number 54] To my dear Henry Tanner Charles H. Pepper Paris '99
  50. ^ "Henry Ossawa Tanner papers, 1860s-1978, bulk 1890-1937: Henry Tanner and family dining outdoors, 1907 or 1908". Smithsonian Archives of American Art. [note: image download numbers 1 and 2] Jesse Tanner, Mrs. Tanner, Barlow, Henry Tanner
  51. ^ "A modest improvement at the National Gallery | Tyler Green: Modern Art Notes | ARTINFO.com". Blogs.artinfo.com. February 3, 2012. Retrieved December 14, 2013.
  52. ^ Finkelman, Paul, ed. (2006). Encyclopedia of African American History 1619–1895. Vol. 1. New York: Oxford University Press. p. 101.
  53. ^ "White House Announces Acquisition of Henry Ossawa Tanner Painting for Permanent White House Collection" Archived July 16, 2011, at the Wayback Machine. Life in the White House.
  54. ^ "Henry Ossawa Tanner correspondence with Atherton Curtis and Ingeborg Curtis (1904–1937)".
  55. ^ "We Speak: Black Artists in Philadelphia, 1920s-1970s". Woodmere Art Museum. Retrieved June 12, 2022.
  56. ^ Carlyn G. Crannell Romeyn (Winter 1983–1984). "Henry O. Tanner: Atlanta Interlude". The Atlanta Historical Journal. 27 (4): 38. On the other hand, it is possible that some of tanner's Atlanta friends secured the three works (including The Bagpipe Lesson which won a bronze medal) for this exposition.
  57. ^ a b c d e f g h i "Henry Ossawa Tanner — Artist". The Northwestern Bulletin-Appeal. Saint Paul, Minnesota. July 25, 1925. p. 2.
  58. ^ a b c d e f g h i Mosby, Dewey F. (1991). Henry Ossawa Tanner. Philadelphia Museum of Art. Philadelphia; New York: Philadelphia Museum of Art; Rizzoli International Publications. p. 39. ISBN 978-0-8478-1346-9. 1895 May. Paris, Salon. Intérieur Bretagne [Brittany Interior], Le Jeune Sabotier [The Young Sabot Maker], pastel of New Jersey coast by moonlight.
  59. ^ a b c d "Henry Ossawa Tanner 1859/1937". Detroit Free Press. July 14, 1991. pp. 284–285.
  60. ^ a b c d "Noted artist dies abroad". Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. May 27, 1937. p. 17.
  61. ^ American Oil Paintings and Sculpture: 28th Annual Art Exhibition, Art Institute of Chicago November 16, 1915 to January 2, 1916.
  62. ^ Mosby, Dewey F.; Sewell, Darrell; Alexander-Minter, Rae (1991). Henry Ossawa Tanner: catalogue. Philadelphia, PA: Philadelphia Museum of Art. p. 32. ISBN 0-87633-086-3.
  63. ^ "Henry Ossawa Tanner and his Contemporaries" Archived April 19, 2012, at the Wayback Machine, Des Moines Art Center.
  64. ^ "Henry Ossawa Tanner: Modern Spirit", PAFA.
  65. ^ "Upcoming Exhibitions". Archived from the original on July 3, 2014. Retrieved April 1, 2015.
  66. ^ "The Thankful Poor". Art Bridges. Retrieved March 3, 2021.
  67. ^ "Moonlight Landscape, (oil on canvas)". Art in Bloom. Muscarelle Museum of Art. 2016. Retrieved June 20, 2018.[permanent dead link]
  68. ^ "Palace of Justice, Tangier, Morocco". World Digital Library. 1890–1900. Retrieved June 27, 2013.
  69. ^ "Henry Ossawa Tanner Lot 41: Henry Ossawa Tanner, (American, 1859-1937), Woman from the French West Indies, c. 1891". The artist arrived in Paris, France at this time and spent the summers on the west coast in Brittany. There, he adopted a predominately green palette with an emphasis on vertical brushstrokes as can be seen in the Woman from the French West Indies...we are looking at an image of a light-skinned woman from one of the islands of the French West Indies-Martinique, Guadeloupe or Dominica. This claim is supported by her costume and headdress.
  70. ^ Mathews, Marcia M (1969). Henry Ossawa Tanner, American artist. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. pp. 69–74.
  71. ^ Henry Ossawa Tanner (July 1909). "The Story of an Artist's Life: II Recognition". The World's Work. Vol. 18, no. 3. Open Court Publishing Co. p. 11772. In 1895, I painted "Daniel in Lions' Den."...It was exhibited in the Salon of 1896..

Further reading

[edit]
  • Anna O. Marley, ed. Henry Ossawa Tanner: Modern Spirit (University of California Press: 2012).
  • Marcia M. Matthews, Henry Ossawa Tanner: American Artist (University of Chicago Press: 1995).
  • Kristin Schwain, Signs of Grace: Religion and American Art in the Gilded Age (Cornell University Press: 2007).
  • Will South, “A Missing Question Mark: The Unknown Henry Ossawa Tanner,” Nineteenth-Century Art Worldwide, vol. 8. issue 2 (Autumn 2009).
  • Judith Wilson, “Lifting ‘The Veil’: Henry O. Tanner’s The Banjo Lesson and The Thankful Poor,” Contributions in Black Studies: A Journal of African and Afro-American Studies, volume 9, article 4.
[edit]
Art online

Archives of American Art