He was one of the eight children of box manufacturer Joseph T. Pearson, Sr. and Annie Virginia Wells, and grew up in the Germantown section of Philadelphia.[1] He attended public schools,[2] and worked in the office of architect Wilson Eyre, 1894–1896.[3]
Pearson attended the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts on scholarship, 1896–1901, where he studied under William Merritt Chase and Julian Weir.[1] He was awarded a 1901 Cresson Traveling Scholarship by PAFA, which enabled him to visit France, Germany and Spain.[4] He studied privately with Weir following his return, and was hired by PAFA as an instructor in drawing.[4] He taught at PAFA for a total of twenty-five years: 1909–1922, and 1924–1937.[5] He also taught at PAFA's summer school in Chester Springs, Pennsylvania.[6]
He attained early notoriety as a landscape painter for works influenced by Japanese art, and often featuring birds and animals.[7] Among these was On the Valley, exhibited at PAFA in 1916:
Joseph T. Pearson, Jr., has had his great moment this year; he reached a high note of achievement that does not often occur in the thorn-pricked paths of an artistic career. His "On the Valley" not only won the Edward T. Stotesbury prize for a painting never before exhibited—a prize which is awarded by the Directors—but he was also given the unanimous vote for the Temple gold medal by the painters' jury. The composition is distinctly decorative in treatment and very original in conception, with bare, sweeping hillsides, veiled in mist, in the distance, beneath which the still valley opens out before us. The arrangement of two geese and a haunting old tree-stump in the foreground realizes a special quality belonging to Mr. Pearson's art, and in the middle distance is suggestively shown a green bank and trees and a boat, broadly painted, flat in tone, remiscent perhaps of Puvis de Chavannes. There is much poetry and beauty in this picture and the artist has succeeded in making others feel as he felt, transversing the banks of the Schuylkill, the beautiful serenity of what lay before him not alone in the actual scene, but heightened by an impassioned imagination.[8]
Pearson painted a trio of full-length portraits of his wife Emily, including Study in Gray (1905).[4] He painted a full-length portrait of his eldest daughter Ruth as a child,[9] and at least two double portraits of his twin daughters, Virginia and Jane.[4] The 1917 double portrait depicted the girls in identical pink dresses, flanking a sewing table and standing before a deep blue mural. The Twins: Virginia and Jane received multiple awards, and has become Pearson's most famous work.[10]
Several PAFA instructors were invited to paint murals for the Pennsylvania Building at the 1926 Sesquicentennial Exposition in Philadelphia.[11] Agriculture was the theme assigned to Pearson, whose lunette-shaped mural, Harvesting, was installed inside the building's north wing.[a] It was the same size—10.75 ft (3.28 m) in height and 21.5 ft (6.6 m) in length—as Daniel Garber's lunette mural, A Wooded Watershed, installed opposite it.[11]
Exhibitions, awards and honors
Pearson exhibited regularly at PAFA from 1904 to 1917, and sporadically thereafter.[13]A Group of Geese was awarded PAFA's 1910 Fellowship Prize;[2]Landscape was awarded its 1911 Jennie Sesnan Medal;[14]: 375 [b]On the Valley was awarded its 1916 Temple Gold Medal along with its $1,000 Edward T. Stotesbury Prize; and The Twins: Virginia and Jane was awarded its 1917 Beck Gold Medal.[13]: 364
He exhibited regularly at the National Academy of Design from 1907 to 1918.[16]A Group of Geese was awarded NAD's 1911 2nd Hallgarten Prize; Landscape was awarded its 1915 George Inness Gold Medal; and Spring was awarded its 1918 Saltus Medal for Merit.[16]
The Carnegie Institute in Pittsburgh awarded him a 1911 Honorable Mention (4th place) for Ducks in a Marsh.[17] The Art Institute of Chicago awarded him its 1915 Norman Wait Harris Silver Medal (and $500 prize) for In the Gloaming;[18] and its 1918 Potter Palmer Award (and $1,000 prize) for The Twins: Virginia and Jane. The Philadelphia Water Color Club awarded him its 1933 Joseph Pennell Medal.[2]
Pearson was elected an Associate of the National Academy of Design in 1913, and an Academician in 1919.[24]
Personal
On October 7, 1902, Pearson married Emily Fetter, also from Germantown. The couple moved into the house where he had grown up, which they occupied until the end of World War I.[5] They had seven children together: Ruth, Joseph III, Emilie, Julian, twins Virginia and Jane, and Justin.
In 1918, Pearson purchased the Silas Yerkes property along the Pennypack Creek, in Huntingdon Valley, Montgomery County, Pennsylvania.[4] He restored its 1790s manor house, and converted its 1797 stone barn into a studio.[c] "After his move to Huntingdon Valley, in 1918, Pearson reduced his artistic output, probably spending more of his time restoring and renovating the stone buildings and landscaping the property to his liking."[5]: 190
Emily Fetter Pearson died suddenly in 1947.[5]: 300 Pearson married family friend and fellow artist Alice Kent Stoddard, in Thomaston, Maine, on May 28, 1948.[2] Stoddard painted multiple portraits of Pearson,[5]: 190 who died less than three years later.
Legacy
The Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts hosted a memorial exhibition of Pearson's work in early 1952.[26]
Among Pearson's PAFA students were Ross Eugene Braught,[27]: 424 William James Dow,[27]: 952 Edith Emerson,[28] Anne Goodell Lathrop,[5]: 291 Arthur Meltzer,[29] and Cesare A. Ricciardi.[30]
At the invitation of one of Pearson's grandchildren, art dealer Roy Wood Jr. visited the studio in 1996, 45 years after the artist's death.[4] Wood catalogued the paintings and drawings he found there, most of which had never been exhibited. A number of these rediscovered works were featured in the Woodmere Art Museum's 2001 retrospective exhibition: Joseph Thurman Pearson, Jr.: A Painter in the Grand Manner.[4]
Selected works
Portraits
Study in Gray (1905), Woodmere Art Museum, Chestnut Hill, Philadelphia[31] Portrait of Emily Fetter Pearson.
Emily (c.1905), Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, Philadelphia[32][33]
Emily (1906), Woodmere Art Museum, Chestnut Hill, Philadelphia[34]
Ruth (undated), unlocated.[9] Ex collection: Corcoran Gallery of Art.[2] Portrait of his eldest daughter, Ruth Elizabeth Pearson Whalen.[2]
Self-Portrait (1914), National Academy of Design, New York City[35] Presented to NAD by Pearson, May 1, 1916.[1]
The Twins: Virginia and Jane (1917), Michener Art Museum, Doylestown, Pennsylvania.[36][37] Awarded PAFA's 1917 Beck Gold Medal, AIC's 1918 Potter Palmer Award, and a Gold Medal at the 1926 Sesquicentennial Exposition.
Landscapes
A Group of Geese (1910), unlocated. Awarded PAFA's 1910 Fellowship Prize, and NAD's 1911 2nd Hallgarten Prize.
Fox and Geese (c.1910), National Academy of Design, New York City.[38] Shared a gold medal at the 1915 Panama–Pacific International Exposition. Presented to NAD by Pearson's widow, Alice Kent Stoddard, May 21, 1952.[1]
October (1910). Awarded a bronze medal at the 1910 World's Fair in Buenos Aires.
Landscape (1911), unlocated. Awarded PAFA's 1911 Jennie Sesnan Medal, and NAD's 1915 George Inness Gold Medal.
Ducks in a Marsh (1911), unlocated. Shared a gold medal at the 1915 Panama–Pacific International Exposition. Ex collection: PAFA[2]
In Vain (Crucifixion) (1930s?), Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, Philadelphia[47]
Sorrow (Pieta) (1935), unlocated
At the Foot of the Cross (1937), unlocated
Notes
^"Over the Agricultural exhibit and in view across the entire building through the Rotunda was a mural by Joseph T. Pearson Jr., depicting Harvesting."[12]
^"Mr. Pearson's landscape with cattle has this severity. A fine schematism regulates the placing of the planes; the very touch is schematic, consisting of multiplied firm, broad strokes. There is an undeniable vividness in Mr. Pearson's work, and one awaits his development with interest. A certain dryness is clearly his danger. Yet so soundly constructed is the landscape which won the Jessie Sesnan medal that it could be hung by those Paul Potters which it distantly recalls."[15]
^Certificate No. 24 - 1440 Creek Road, Huntingdon Valley: "This manor house was constructed in the 1790s by Silas Yerkes as part of his farm complex at the corner of Huntingdon and Creek Roads. Yerkes sold the property to George Shelmire and it became part of the Shelmire Mills complex of the late 1700s to mid-1800s. The entire Shelmire complex was sold to artist Joseph Pearson Jr. in 1918, and he renovated this house for his own use. He also renovated the 1797 barn structure (Certificate No. 21) on the property for an art studio, and the area became known as Pearson's Corner. This home is considered to be a fine example of 'Colonial Revival' style architecture."[25]
References
^ abcdeDavid B. Dearinger, "Joseph Thurman Pearson, Jr." Paintings and Sculpture in the Collection of the National Academy of Design, Volume 1, 1826-1925, (Manchester, VT: Hudson Hills Press, 2004), p. 437.
^ abcdefg"PEARSON, Joseph Thurman, Jr.," The National Cyclopedia of American Biography, Volume 40 (New York: James T. White & Company, 1955), p. 176.[1]
^Joseph T. Pearson Jr., "The Painter and the Architect," Journal of the American Institute of Architects, vol. 5, no. 6 (June 1917), pp. 297-299.
^ abcdefghMichael W. Schantz and Roy Wood Jr., Joseph Thurman Pearson, Jr.: A Painter in the Grand Manner, exhibition catalogue, Woodmere Art Museum, April 8 - July 8, 2001.
^ abcdefghBrian H. Peterson, William H. Gerdts, Sylvia Yount, and Erika Jaeger Smith. Pennsylvania Impressionism, (Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 2002), pp. 188-191.
^Harvey M. Watts, "Going to the Source of All Inspiration: Outdoors with the Pennsylvania Academy Summer School," Arts & Decoration Magazine, vol. 15, no. 4 (August 1921), pp. 222-223, 264.
^Lula Merrick, "At the Philadelphia Academy," The Spur, vol. 17, no. 5 (March 1, 1916), p. 18.
^Hanna Tachau, "Pictures and Sculptures Shown in the One Hundred and Eleventh Annual Exhibition of the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts," The Book News Monthly, vol. 34, no. 8 (April 1916), p. 335.
^ ab"The Pennsylvania Building and Its Murals," A Wooded Watershed by Daniel Garber (2017).[2] from Michener Art Museum.
^Report of the Pennsylvania Sesqui-Centennial Commission, 1776-1926, (Sesqui-Centennial Commission of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, 1927), p. 16.
^ abPeter Hastings Falk, ed., The Annual Exhibition Record of the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, Volume 3, 1914-1968, (Madison, CT: Sound View Press, 1989).
^Peter Hastings Falk, ed., The Annual Exhibition Record of the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, Volume 2, 1876-1913, (Madison, CT: Sound View Press, 1989).
^Frank Jewett Mather, "The Pennsylvania Academy," The Nation, vol. 92, no. 2381 (February 16, 1911), p. 176.
^ abPeter Hastings Falk, ed., The Annual Exhibition Record of the National Academy of Design, 1901-1950, (Madison, CT: Sound View Press, 1990).
^"The Carnegie Institute's Exhibition," Art and Progress, vol. 11, no. 8 (June 1911), pp. 236-237.
^"Annual Exhibition in Chicago," The American Magazine of Art, January 1916, p. 97.
^Official Catalogue of the Department of Fine Arts, Panama–Pacific International Exposition, (San Francisco: The Wahlgreen Company, 1915), p. 170.
^Exhibition of Paintings by Mr. Joseph T. Pearson, Jr. and of Sculpture by Mr. Albert Laessle, (Boston: St. Botolph Club, April 15–26, 1912).[3]
^Exhibition of Works by Albert Laessle, N. A. / Joseph T. Pearson, Jr., N. A. / Together with a Portion of the Charles K. Smith Collection, exhibition catalogue, Woodmere Art Museum, 1943.
^Milch Galleries, Exhibition of Paintings by Daniel Garber, W.L. Lathrop, Joseph T. Pearson, Jr., Robert Spencer; January 30 to February 12, (New York: Milch Galleries, 1921).
^Drawings by Joseph T. Pearson, Jr.; October 23 - November 12, 1937, Corcoran Gallery of Art, Past Exhibitions (PDF) from National Gallery of Art.