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William Thorne

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William Thorne

Birth
Delavan, Walworth County, Wisconsin, USA
Death
10 Jan 1956 (aged 92)
Delavan, Walworth County, Wisconsin, USA
Burial
Delavan, Walworth County, Wisconsin, USA Add to Map
Plot
Block 2, Lot 15, Section 2
Memorial ID
View Source
Father: Nicolas Thorne, b.1822 Dutchess Co., NY., d.1899 Delavan, Walworth Co., WI.
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Mother: Marie Louise Gaston, b.1835 Auburn, Cayuga Co., NY., d.1866 Delavan, Walworth Co., WI.
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BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCH - known primarily as a portrait painter, William Thorne (1863-1956), was born and died in Delavan, Wisconsin. While working as a student, and illustrator - he spent much of his early life away from his home state. In the mid 1880s, he enrolled in evening classes at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago, and in 1887 and 1888, he attended the antique class of the National Academy of Design in New York City. While in New York, William executed portraits, to earn a living. Thorne entered the antique class of the National Academy of Design during the 1887-88 term, and won a medal for the first work he exhibited at the National Academy in 1888. After deciding to continue his artistic education abroad, Thorne traveled to Paris sometime around 1890. He studied at the "Académie Julian" (Paris, France) with Jules Lefevbre and Jean-Paul Laurens, also working with Jean Joseph Benjamin-Constant. During his three years in Paris, Thorne's portrait clients were most often Americans living in France. Before returning to the United States, Thorne painted in "Etretat" in 1892 (Étretat is a sea-side village in the Seine-Maritime department in the Haute-Normandie region in north-western France - the site is best known for its cliffs, including three natural arches and the pointed "needle". These cliffs and the associated resort beach attracted artists including Eugène Boudin, Gustave Courbet and Claude Monet, and were featured prominently in the 1909 Arsène Lupin novel "The Hollow Needle", by Maurice Leblanc), and he also spent time in London. Thorne settled in New York around 1902, establishing his career as a society portraitist at his Carnegie Hall studio. Among his sitters were the children of Andrew Carnegie and Jay Gould. John Singer Sargent (painted a portrait of William i 1905, which is inscribed "to my friend Thorn"), and William Merritt Chase numbered among his more prominent artist friends. He married Margaret Grace Lowe in 1917. During the second decade of the 1900s, Thorne returned permanently to Delavan, the city of his birth, building a replica of his Carnegie Hall studio. In this later period in his career, Thorne was referred to as the dean of Wisconsin portrait painters.
Father: Nicolas Thorne, b.1822 Dutchess Co., NY., d.1899 Delavan, Walworth Co., WI.
-
Mother: Marie Louise Gaston, b.1835 Auburn, Cayuga Co., NY., d.1866 Delavan, Walworth Co., WI.
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BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCH - known primarily as a portrait painter, William Thorne (1863-1956), was born and died in Delavan, Wisconsin. While working as a student, and illustrator - he spent much of his early life away from his home state. In the mid 1880s, he enrolled in evening classes at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago, and in 1887 and 1888, he attended the antique class of the National Academy of Design in New York City. While in New York, William executed portraits, to earn a living. Thorne entered the antique class of the National Academy of Design during the 1887-88 term, and won a medal for the first work he exhibited at the National Academy in 1888. After deciding to continue his artistic education abroad, Thorne traveled to Paris sometime around 1890. He studied at the "Académie Julian" (Paris, France) with Jules Lefevbre and Jean-Paul Laurens, also working with Jean Joseph Benjamin-Constant. During his three years in Paris, Thorne's portrait clients were most often Americans living in France. Before returning to the United States, Thorne painted in "Etretat" in 1892 (Étretat is a sea-side village in the Seine-Maritime department in the Haute-Normandie region in north-western France - the site is best known for its cliffs, including three natural arches and the pointed "needle". These cliffs and the associated resort beach attracted artists including Eugène Boudin, Gustave Courbet and Claude Monet, and were featured prominently in the 1909 Arsène Lupin novel "The Hollow Needle", by Maurice Leblanc), and he also spent time in London. Thorne settled in New York around 1902, establishing his career as a society portraitist at his Carnegie Hall studio. Among his sitters were the children of Andrew Carnegie and Jay Gould. John Singer Sargent (painted a portrait of William i 1905, which is inscribed "to my friend Thorn"), and William Merritt Chase numbered among his more prominent artist friends. He married Margaret Grace Lowe in 1917. During the second decade of the 1900s, Thorne returned permanently to Delavan, the city of his birth, building a replica of his Carnegie Hall studio. In this later period in his career, Thorne was referred to as the dean of Wisconsin portrait painters.

Inscription

William Thorne N.A.
Jan. 20, 1863
Jan. 10, 1956

Gravesite Details

N.A. = "Not Attending" (presumably a sarcastic [humorous] reference to his Quaker ancestry).



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