D'Amour Museum of Fine Arts
Landscape scene of Dartmouth College and surrounding lanes.
After Ami B. Young American, birth and death dates unknown In 1828, at the age of 15, Nathaniel Currier began an apprenticeship at the printing firm of William and John Pendleton of Boston. The Pendletons taught Currier the process of lithography, how to operate the presses and the business of printing. By 1833, John Pendleton had moved his firm to New York and sold the company to another printmaker, Mr. Stodart. Stodart and Currier were uneasy business partners and Stodart soon departed. Dartmouth College, a scene of the President’s House and various college halls, was among the first prints that the firm created. Currier later published the work under his name only as shown in this example.
- Object Creator
-
Currier, Nathaniel (American, 1813-1888)
- Object Creation Date
-
Undated
- Medium
-
Hand-colored lithograph
- Dimensions
-
8 ¼ x 12 15/16 inches
- Credit
-
Gift of Lenore B. and Sidney A. Alpert supplemented with Museum Acquistions Funds
- Accession Number
-
2004.D03.339
- On View?
-
No
- Image Request
-
Request Image for Reproduction
Related Items
Springfield Museums2015-11-03T16:14:23-05:00
Evening scene. Steamship sailing down bayou surrounded by trees with torches lit on either side of ship. People on staircase…
Springfield Museums2015-11-03T16:16:22-05:00
Small ship sailing to left in image in stormy seas. Four persons on deck, one sail raised.
Springfield Museums2015-11-03T16:16:19-05:00
Steamboat MAYFLOWER sailing to left in image - two American flags flying from top deck to right of center. Remainder…