William Thompson Russell Smith
William Thompson Russell Smith was a Scottish-American painter who produced iconic images of Pennsylvania's landscape inspired by the aesthetic of the Hudson River School.
Early life and education
Born in Glasgow, Scotland, Smith was brought to the United States in 1819 by his parents, who lived in western Pennsylvania and settled in Pittsburgh. Here, between 1828 and 1831, he studied art under the portraitist James Lambdin, a former pupil of Thomas Sully.Career
Smith also served as curator of Lambdin's Pittsburgh Museum, where he met many of the city's scientists and intellectuals. At the beginning of his career, Smith found considerable success in painting commercial signs and backgrounds for theatrical productions.In 1835, he moved to Philadelphia in order to paint decorations for the Walnut Street Theater. During this time that he began to write poetry and produced smaller-scale landscape paintings that were inspired by his theatrical scenery. These works were displayed in public exhibitions, including the Artists' Fund Society and the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts in Philadelphia, where he regularly contributed to the annual exhibitions until 1889. In 1858, he was honored with a commission by the Philadelphia Academy of Music to paint their scenery. Smith traveled throughout Pennsylvania, Virginia, and New England to observe nature and drawing sketches for later works, showing extraordinary talent in painting atmosphere, water, and other elements of nature. He became friend of Rembrandt Peale, who published a very favorable article on the artist in the Gazette of [the United States], and he was steadily patronized by Philadelphia's conservative social elite.