David Sellin

David Frost Sellin (1930, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 11 April 2006, Washington, D.C.) was an American art historian, educator, and author. He taught at a number of universities, worked on the staffs of several museums, and served as curator of the U.S. Capitol, 1976-1980.[1]

He was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, where he attended Quaker schools. As a teenager, he studied privately with painter Frank B. A. Linton, a former student of Thomas Eakins, and spent a year in Sweden in the atelier of painter Otte Sköld. He received bachelor's and master's degrees in art history from the University of Pennsylvania. He returned to Stockholm to study for a year at the Royal Swedish Academy of Arts, and studied for two years in Rome as a Fulbright scholar.[2]

He returned to Philadelphia, worked as an assistant curator at the Philadelphia Museum of Art, and completed a doctorate in art history at the University of Pennsylvania.[3] He became director of schools at the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts (PAFA), a position Eakins once had held.

His research into the influence of France on 19th-century Philadelphia artists notably Joseph A. Bailly, Mary Cassatt, Eakins, and Howard Roberts culminated in a 1973 exhibition at the Philadelphia Museum of Art.[4] Sellin curated three additional exhibitions that featured Eakins as a subject: American Art in the Making: Preparatory Studies for Masterpieces of American Painting, 1800-1900 (Smithsonian Institution, 1976); Thomas Eakins, Susan Macdowell Eakins, Elizabeth Macdowell Kenton (PAFA, 1977); and Thomas Eakins and His Fellow Artists at the Philadelphia Sketch Club (Philadelphia Sketch Club, 2001). His research into expatriate American artists who settled in France led to a 1982 joint exhibition by PAFA and the Phoenix Art Museum, that also traveled to France.[5]

He was a lecturer at the University of Pennsylvania, Harvard University, American University, Tulane University, the University of Texas, and other universities. He served on the faculties of Colgate University and Wesleyan University, where he also directed their art galleries.[1]

He moved to Washington, D.C. in 1971, to work at what is now the Smithsonian Museum of American Art. As curator of the U.S. Capitol, he oversaw restoration of four of the massive paintings in the Rotunda, and conserved hundreds of 19th-century drawings by the building's architect, Thomas U. Walter.[1]

He published numerous articles on American artists, and worked as an independent curator and consultant.

Exhibitions

Publications

References

  1. 1 2 3 Obituary (2006-04-18). "David Sellin, 75; Art Historian was Curator for U.S. Capitol". The Washington Post. Retrieved 2014-02-24.
  2. David Sellin, Ph.D., Thomas Eakins and His Fellow Artists at the Philadelphia Sketch Club, exhibition catalogue, Philadelphia Sketch Club, 2001, p. 23.
  3. David Sellin, Michelino da Besozzo, dissertation, University of Pennsylvania, 1968.
  4. David Sellin, The First Pose: Howard Roberts, Thomas Eakins, and a Century of Philadelphia Nudes, exhibition catalogue, Philadelphia Museum of Art, 1973.
  5. David Sellin and James K. Ballinger, Americans in Brittany and Normandy, 1860-1910, exhibition catalogue, Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts and Phoenix Art Museum, 1982. ISBN 978-0-910407-00-7
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