Max Rosenthal
Max Rosenthal (born in Turck, Kingdom of Poland, 23 November 1833; died 8 August 1918) was a Polish-American painter, lithographer, draftsman and etcher.
Biography
In 1847 he went to Paris, where he studied lithography, drawing, and painting with M. Thurwanger, with whom he came to Philadelphia in 1849, and completed his studies. He made the chromolithographic plates for what is believed to be the first fully illustrated book by this process in the United States, “Wild Scenes and Wild Hunters.” In 1854 he drew and lithographed an interior view of the old Masonic temple in Philadelphia, the plate being 22 by 25 inches, the largest chromolithograph that had been made in the country up to that time.
He designed and executed the illustrations for various works, and during the Civil War followed the Army of the Potomac, and drew every camp, up to the Battle of Gettysburg. These drawings he reproduced at the time. Up to 1884 he did miscellaneous works, including about 200 lithographs of distinguished Americans.
After 1884 he turned his attention to etching, and executed over 150 portraits of eminent Americans and British officers, together with numerous large plates, among which are:
- “Storm Approaches,” after the painting by Henry Mosler
- illustrations for several of Longfellow's poems
- “Doris, the Shepherd's Maiden”
- “Marguerite”
He was a member of the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts, and one of the founders of the Sketch Club. His son, Albert (born in Philadelphia, 30 January 1863) was also a noted artist.
Notes
References
- This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Wilson, James Grant; Fiske, John, eds. (1900). "Rosenthal, Max". Appletons' Cyclopædia of American Biography. New York: D. Appleton
- Joseph Jackson (1935). "Rosenthal, Max". Dictionary of American Biography. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons.
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