Paintings

Jean (McLane) MacLane
American, 1878–1964
Spring
Oil on canvas
22 by 30 in. W/frame 29 ½ by 37 ½ in.
Signed & dated 1898 lower right

Inventory Number: Art M81
American Figurative Landscape Period 1800-1899 19th Century Impressionist/Post Impressionist

See Artist Bio below.


Jean (McLane) MacLane
American, 1878–1964

Jean MacLane was born on September 14, 1878 in Chicago, and died on January 23, 1964 in New Canaan, Connecticut.  Her first studies were with John Vanderpoel at the Art Institute of Chicago.  She later studied with Frank Duveneck in Cincinnati, Ohio.  MacLane later moved to New York to study with William Merritt Chase.  He was the first person to purchase a painting of her early works.

MacLane and her husband, artist John C. Johansen, (1876-1964) help found the National Foundation of Portrait Painters in 1912.  In that same year, she was invited by a group of philanthropists to depict the Allied Leaders from W.W. I.  McLane provided the only female subject, Queen Elisabeth of Belgians.  This painting now hangs in the National Museum of American Art, Washington, D.C.

Also in 1912, she was elected associate member of the National Academy of Design and a full academician in 1926.

McLane became noted for her portraits of women and children.  In 1931, she was elected to the American Academy of Arts and Letters.  Her portrait of actor William Gillette hangs at the Academy.

Awards:
Medal, Louisiana Purchase Exposition, St. Louis, 1904
First Prize, International League, Paris, 1907-08
Elling Prize, New York Women’s Art Club, 1907
Burgess Prize, New York Women’s Art Club, 1908
Julia Shaw Prize, National Academy of Design, 1912
Third Hallgarten Prize, National Academy of Design, 1913
Lippincott Prize, Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Art, 1914
Silver Medal, Panama-Pacific Exposition, San Francisco, 1915
Harris Silver Medal and Prize, AIC, 1924

Museums and Exhibitions:

Museum of Art, Toledo
Art Institute of Chicago
San Antonio Museum, Texas
Syracuse Art Museum, New York
National Museum of American Art, Washington D.C.

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