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Brooks Museum of Art, Memphis, Tennessee A large canvas, about 6 x 8 ft, Gutherz's asking price was $10,000. [1]: 253 Arcessita ab Angelis (Borne Away by Angels) [99] Oil on canvas 1889 Brooks Museum of Art, Memphis, Tennessee Temptation of St. Anthony [100] Oil on canvas 1890 Private collection. Memphis, Tennessee Ellen Day Hale: Bessy [101 ...
The Smith House is similar to the Harry Goodrich House through its high pitched and double sloped roof. The Goodrich House, an 1896 Wright design, may have also been one of the unbuilt homes Wright designed for Roberts. [2] The shingles stand in contrast to the style Frank Lloyd Wright was using by the time the house was built in 1898.
W. E. Smith House, Albany, listed on the NRHP; Tullie Smith House, Atlanta; Jim Smith House, Lyons; Archibald Smith House, Roswell; Dr. Robert L. and Sarah Alberta ...
George W. Smith House may refer to: . in the United States (by state) . George W. Smith House (Oak Park, Illinois), listed on the NRHP in Illinois George W. Smith House (Elizabethtown, Kentucky), Elizabethtown, Kentucky, listed on the National Register of Historic Places in Hardin County, Kentucky
The Crying Boy is a mass-produced print of a painting by Italian painter Giovanni Bragolin [1] (1911–1981). This was the pen-name of the painter Bruno Amarillo. It was widely distributed from the 1950s onwards. There are numerous alternative versions, all portraits of tearful young boys or girls. [1]
It was purchased by Warner Price Mumford Smith and his wife, Augusta Amelia Houser in 1853; the Smiths owned a flour mill and a stagecoach stop. [2] Their son, Robert Edmund Lee Smith, purchased the house in 1909; it was inherited by their daughter Dora Smith Moser in 1967, and by their grandson, Michael F. Moser, in 1991. [ 2 ]
The George W. Smith House is a historic house in Geneva, Nebraska. It was built in 1890 for George W. Smith, a real estate investor and former banker who lived in the house until 1921. [ 2 ] Smith was married Addie F. Dempster, whose brother lived in the Dempster-Sloan House . [ 3 ]
The house was built in 1856-1859 for Christopher Smith, a tobacco merchant. [2] The house remained in the Smith family until 1919. [2] The house was acquired by the city of Clarskville and repurposed as a community center in 1986. [2]