See also:EAKINS, See also:- THOMAS
- THOMAS (c. 1654-1720)
- THOMAS (d. 110o)
- THOMAS, ARTHUR GORING (1850-1892)
- THOMAS, CHARLES LOUIS AMBROISE (1811-1896)
- THOMAS, GEORGE (c. 1756-1802)
- THOMAS, GEORGE HENRY (1816-187o)
- THOMAS, ISAIAH (1749-1831)
- THOMAS, PIERRE (1634-1698)
- THOMAS, SIDNEY GILCHRIST (1850-1885)
- THOMAS, ST
- THOMAS, THEODORE (1835-1905)
- THOMAS, WILLIAM (d. 1554)
THOMAS (1844– ) , See also:American portrait and figure painter, was See also:born at See also:Philadelphia, on the 25th of See also:July 1844. A See also:- PUPIL (Lat. pupillus, orphan, minor, dim. of pupus, boy, allied to puer, from root pm- or peu-, to beget, cf. "pupa," Lat. for " doll," the name given to the stage intervening between the larval and imaginal stages in certain insects)
pupil of J. L. Ger8me, in the 1 See also:cole See also:des See also:Beaux-Arts, See also:Paris, and Also of See also:Leon See also:Bonnat, besides working in the studio of the sculptor See also:Dumont, he became a prolific portrait painter. He also painted genre pictures, sending to the Centennial See also:Exhibition at Philadelphia, in 1876, the " See also:Chess Players," now in the See also:Metropolitan Museum of See also:Art, New See also:York. A large See also:canvas, " The Surgical Clinic of See also:Professor See also:Gross," owned by See also:Jefferson Medical See also:College, Philadelphia, contains many See also:life-sized figures. Eakins, with his pupil See also:Samuel See also:- MURRAY
- MURRAY (or MORAY), EARLS OF
- MURRAY (or MORAY), JAMES STUART, EARL OF (c. 1531-1570)
- MURRAY (or MORAY), SIR ROBERT (c. 1600-1673)
- MURRAY, ALEXANDER STUART (1841-1904)
- MURRAY, DAVID (1849– )
- MURRAY, EUSTACE CLARE GRENVILLE (1824–1881)
- MURRAY, JAMES (c. 1719-1794)
- MURRAY, JOHN
- MURRAY, JOHN (1778–1820)
- MURRAY, LINDLEY (1745–1826)
- MURRAY, LORD GEORGE (1694–1760)
- MURRAY, SIR JAMES AUGUSTUS HENRY (1837– )
- MURRAY, SIR JOHN (1841– )
Murray (b. 1870), modelled the heroic " Prophets " for the See also:Witherspoon See also:Building, Philadelphia, and his See also:work in See also:painting has a decided sculptural quality. He was for some years professor of See also:anatomy at the See also:schools of the See also:Pennsylvania See also:Academy of See also:Fine Arts in Philadelphia. A See also:man of See also:great inventiveness, he experimented in many directions, depicting on canvas See also:modern athletic See also:sports, the See also:negro, and See also:early American life, but he is best known by his portraits. He received awards at the Columbian (1893), Paris (1900), See also:Pan-American (1900), and the St See also:- LOUIS
- LOUIS (804–876)
- LOUIS (893–911)
- LOUIS, JOSEPH DOMINIQUE, BARON (1755-1837)
- LOUIS, or LEWIS (from the Frankish Chlodowich, Chlodwig, Latinized as Chlodowius, Lodhuwicus, Lodhuvicus, whence-in the Strassburg oath of 842-0. Fr. Lodhuwigs, then Chlovis, Loys and later Louis, whence Span. Luiz and—through the Angevin kings—Hungarian
Louis (1904), Expositions; and won the See also:Temple
' Which See also:species may have been the traditional See also:emblem of See also:Roman See also:power, and the See also:Ales Jovis, is very uncertain.See also:medal in the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts, and the See also:Proctor See also:prize of the See also:National Academy of See also:Design.
End of Article: EAKINS, THOMAS (1844– )
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