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William Turner Dannat

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William Turner Dannat (July 9, 1853 – March 12, 1929) was an American artist known especially for paintings of Spanish subject matter.

William Turner Dannat
Born(1853-07-09)July 9, 1853
DiedMarch 12, 1929(1929-03-12) (aged 75)
OccupationArtist

Biography

Quatuor Espagnol ca. 1884

William T. Dannat was born in 1853 at Hempstead, New York [1][2] the younger of two boys raised by William H. and Susan (née Jones) Dannat. His father was a successful lumber dealer who, with Charles E. Pell, founded the firm Dannat and Pell. Later William’s older brother David would succeed their father as a partner in the firm.[3][4]

When Dannat was around the age of twelve his parents decided to send him to Germany to further his education.[5] He would later study architecture at Hanover and Stuttgart before choosing instead to become an artist. Dannat attended art classes at the Munich Royal Academy of Fine Arts and later under Mihaly Munkacsy in Paris. Dannat became an accomplished draughtsman and a distinguished figure and portrait painter. He early attracted attention with sketches and pictures made in Spain. A large composition, The Quatuor Espagnol, that was displayed at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York, was one of the successes of the Paris Salon of 1884. Dannat later settled in Paris, where he taught at the Académie Julian. He was influenced by a number of masters including Carolus Duran and Munkacsy, though more by the latter as can be observed in his paintings Contrebandier Aragonais and Quatuor Espagnol.[6][7][8]

Though at one time his name was mentioned alongside other great American painters such as Sargent and Whistler, Dannat’s popularity was more in Europe than his homeland. As he approached middle age the financially secure artist began to devote more and more of his time to other interests: fencing, boxing and later automobile racing. For nearly twenty years Dannat ceased painting and when he resumed around 1913 his art had adopted a more surrealistic style with illusionary landscapes and bizarre themes. During his hiatus from painting Dannat spent much of his time touring Europe studying the techniques of the great masters while remaining active in artistic circles in Paris where he served at one time as the president of the Society of American Painters.[7]

William Turner Dannat died in 1929, aged 75, while at Monte Carlo.[9]

Contrebandier Aragonais ca. 1883
A Dancer ca. 1890s
Femmes Espagnoles ca. 1892

References

  1. ^ US Passport Application (William T. Dannat) September 6, 1870
  2. ^ 1880 US Census Records
  3. ^ The New York Times November 2, 1889
  4. ^ The New York Times October 9, 1897
  5. ^ The National Cyclopaedia of American Biography, Volume 12 1904
  6. ^ Munsey's Magazine vol 13 1892
  7. ^ a b Paintings and Sculpture in the Collection of the National Academy of Design ... By David Bernard Dearinger, National Academy of Design (U.S. 2004
  8. ^ Public opinion, Volume 36 By Progressive Conservative Party of Canada 1904
  9. ^ The New York Times April 5, 1929