Sullivan Goss
AN AMERICAN GALLERY
Celebrating 27 Years of 19th, 20th and 21st Century American Art
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ALEXANDER HARMER

(1856-1925)

Southern California's First Great Painter of the 19th Century

By Danielle Peltakian

On August 21, 1856, Alexander Harmer was born in Newark, NJ. At the age of 16, he joined the U.S. Army and was stationed in California. However, after one year, he left his post to pursue a career as an artist. He enrolled at the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Art, where he studied under Thomas Eakins and Thomas Anshutz. In 1881, he re-enlisted in the Army and was assigned in Arizona. Upon his return to the PAFA, he turned his sketches of the Apache Nation into illustrations for Harper�s Weekly. Upon his marriage in the early 1890s, he settled in Santa Barbara, where he worked on a series of paintings of the California missions under Mexican rule. His adobe on De La Guerra Plaza became a local hangout for many of California�s premier painters. Today, he is remembered as �Southern California�s first great painter of the 19th Century.�




Exhibitions

  • 1882, 1891 Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Art
  • 1887 California State Fair
  • 1909 Alaska Yukon Exposition, Seattle, WA (Gold Medal)
  • Collections

  • Los Angeles County Museum of Art
  • Santa Barbara Historical Society
  • Santa Barbara Museum of Art
  • University of Texas, Austin
  • Bibliography

    1. 1. Falk, Peter Hastings ed., Who Was Who in American Art: 1564-1975, Vol. II, Madison, CT: Sound View Press, 1999, p. 1461.
    2. 2. Hughes, Edan Milton. Artists in California: 1786-1940. Third ed.,Vol. I, Sacramento, Calif.: Crocker Art Museum, 2002, p. 489.
    3. Updated 4/20/07

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    Study of an Apache
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