Walter Franklin Lansil

Walter Franklin Lansil (1846–1925) was an American painter. Born in Bangor, Maine, to Asa Paine Lansil and Betsey Turner Grout he was a descendant of Stephen Hopkins of the Mayflower and Edmund Rice an early immigrant to the Massachusetts Bay Colony.[1][2] He first studied under Jeremiah Pearson Hardy, then moved to Boston, Massachusetts in 1872 with his younger brother and fellow painter Wilbur Henry "Bibber" Lansil (1855–1897).[3] In 1888 the brothers sailed to Europe, where Lansil studied at the Académie Julian in Paris and became enchanted with Venice, a city he'd paint for the rest of his life. By 1891 the brothers had returned to Boston, were living together at 101 Maxwell Street Dorchester with their brothers Asa Brainard Lansil and Edwin Lansil and Edwin's wife and children (brothers Walter, Wilbur and Asa never married) and began holding joint exhibits at their studio in Dorchester.[4]

Walter Franklin Lansil
Boston artist Walter Franklin Lansil ca 1880
Born1846
Died1925
NationalityAmerican
EducationAcadémie Julian
OccupationPainter
Parent(s)Asa Paine Lansil & Betsey Turner Grout

Walter Lansil was a member of the Boston Art Club and The Society of Sons of the Revolution.[5] Although the New York Times called him in 1897 "the celebrated Venetian painter", he also painted marine scenes, battles, and portraits.[6] In 1914 he published a memoir entitled A Trip to Venice. He died on 22 January 1925 in Boston, and he was buried at his ancestral home in Bangor, Maine.[7]

References

  1. "A Trip to Venice". Passage to the Past Blog. Retrieved 26 March 2017.
  2. The First Nine Generations of the Descendants of Edmund Rice, 2016. (CD-ROM). Edmund Rice (1638) Association: ERA Books
  3. Appleton's Annual Cyclopedia (1898), p. 601
  4. Boston Daily Globe, April 11, 1911
  5. Boston Arts Club Constitution and Bylaws (1890)
  6. New York Times, Obit. of Wilber Henry Lansil, June 28, 1897, p. 7
  7. "Walter Franklin Lansil (1846-1925)". Find-a-Grave. Retrieved 26 March 2017.
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