|
Introduction
Help
What's New
Registration
White Mountain Art History
Artist Biographies
Artist Galleries
Subject Galleries
Photo Comparisons
White Mountain Art Exhibitions
Links to Other Sites
Visitor Supplied Information
Bibliography
Credits
Conditions of Use
Site Search
| |
John Joseph Enneking (1841 - 1911)
When Enneking was orphaned at the age of 16, he left his father's farm to live with an
aunt. His first art lessons, taken at Mount St. Mary's College in Cincinnati, were
interrupted when he enlisted in the Union Army during the Civil War. Severely
wounded in action and discharged from service, Enneking eventually made his way to Boston
to continue art lessons. For a time he studied industrial drawing and lithography,
but dropped it when his eyes weakened. Tinsmithing proved more profitable, and while
he flourished at this occupation he married and built a large home in Hyde Park, MA.
He became a partner in a wholesale establishment that soon after failed, and again
Enneking returned to art. His efforts finally met success, and by the time he sailed
for Europe in 1872, his career as an artist had been assured. Enneking sudied with
Bonnat and Daubigny in Paris from 1873 to 1876 and with Lehr in Munich. After
studying in Europe, he returned to Boston in 1876 and opened a studio. His later
style became much more impressionistic, losing much of the grandeur of his earlier
European teachers.
Enneking was a member of the Twentieth Century Club, Pudding Stone Club, Hyde Park
Historical Society, Boston Art Club, Paint and Clay Club of Boston, and the Boston Guild
of Artists.
He exhibited at the following: Massachusetts Charitable Mechanics Association,
Boston (medals); Paris Expo, 1900 (prize); Pan-Am Expo in Buffalo, 1901 (medal);
Pan-Pacific Expo in San Francisco, 1915 (gold). His work has been preserved at
the Worcester Museum and the Boston Museum of Fine Art.
Enneking made several painting trips to the White Mountains and became the
artist-in-residence at Wilson Cottages and, later (?), the Iron Mountain House.
His last known address was Hyde Park, Massachusetts. |