Henry Ossawa Tanner was a renowned African American painter
@Realist Painters, Life Achievements and Personal Life
Henry Ossawa Tanner was a renowned African American painter
Henry Ossawa Tanner born at
In 1899, he tied the nuptial knot with Jessie Ollsen, an American opera singer. Their son Jesse Ossawa Tanner was born in 1903. Tanner passed away at his home in Paris.
Born in a religious African-American family of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, United States, Henry Ossawa Tanner was the eldest of nine children of Benjamin Tucker Tanner, a minister in the African Methodist Episcopal Church and Sarah Tanner.
His family shifted to Philadelphia when he was very young. He studied at the Robert Vaux School. Later he attended several African-American schools where he studied liberal arts curriculum.
He was attracted towards arts since his early childhood days. As a teenager, he dreamt of becoming a painter. Moreover, his poor health condition made him to stay at home most of the time and he utilized that time for drawing works.
In 1876, he drew paintings of harbour scenes, portraits of landscapes and various animals that he noticed in the zoo of Philadelphia. After his recovery, he took admission at the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts in 1880.
There he studied under the guidance of Thomas Eakins, a renowned American sculptor and realist painter who had a great influence on Henry’s life and work .
After completing his study, Henry moved to Atlanta, Georgia to teach art. There he worked as a teacher at Clark University. At that time he made a failed attempt to open a photography studio.
With the help of Joseph C. Hartzell, a bishop, he exhibited some of his paintings in Cincinnati. In 1891, he went on a tour across Europe with the patronage of that bishop and Mrs. Hartzell.
In the same year, his visit to Paris changed his entire life. He was fascinated by France’s artistic world that was much advanced than that of America’s art world. He decided to stay in Paris for the rest of his life.
In Paris, he attended the Academie Julian, an art school. Colours like blue and blue-green played a dominant role in most of his paintings that he created at that time. He also started using the artistic technique of light and shade during that period.
In 1893, he came back to the United States to deliver a paper on African Americans and art at the World’s Columbian Exposition in Chicago. In the same year, he created one of his famous works ‘The Banjo Lesson’ while he was in Philadelphia.
He created his masterpiece ‘The Banjo Lesson’ in 1893. The drawing shows a young boy is learning to play banjo from an aged gentleman. The image is truly praiseworthy mainly for its usage of light and shades in a meaningful way.