John Elwood Bundy
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John Elwood Bundy (May 1, 1853-January 17, 1933) was an American Impressionist painter known as the "dean" of the Richmond Group of painters in the late 19th and early 20th centuries.
Bundy was born in Guilford County, North Carolina and moved by covered wagon to Monrovia, Indiana with his family at the age of five. He studied briefly in Indianapolis with Barton S. Hays but was primarily self-taught. He joined the art department of Earlham College in 1887 and took up painting full time in 1895. He was a founding member of the Society of Western Artists and was a central influence in the founding of the Richmond Art Museum in 1898. He was known for his Indiana landscapes and particularly for his paintings of American Beech trees, though he did make brief trips to paint in California and northern Michigan.
[edit] References
- Burnet, Mary Q. Art and Artists of Indiana. New York; The Century Co., 1921.
- Gerdts, William H. A Walk in the Woods: The Art of John Elwood Bundy
- Fedders, Kristin U. Poetic Woodlands: The Art of John Elwood Bundy Richmond Art Museum, 2002