Joseph Mason (artist)

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Joseph Mason (1808 – 8 October 1842)[lower-alpha 1] was an American artist who worked as an assistant to John James Audubon, painting uncredited plant-life backgrounds for some 50 of his bird studies for the book The Birds of America.

File:Blue Yellow-backed Warbler (Audubon).jpg
Plate 15 from Birds of America, with northern parula birds (then called blue yellow-backed warblers) painted by John James Audubon and an Iris fulva flower stalk painted by Joseph Mason, 1821. The original watercolor is held by the New York Historical Society.

Early life

Joseph Mason, who is listed in some sources as Joseph R. Mason, was born in Delaware, Ohio, the son of Joseph Wilson Mason (a bookseller), and later moved to Cincinnati, Ohio.[1][3]

Career

Tutelage under Audubon

When Audubon came to Cincinnati for a short time in 1820, Mason became his pupil, showing exceptional talent, especially as a draftsperson.[3][4][5] Audubon later wrote in a letter to his wife that Mason had a "fine" talent for painting and "draws flowers better than any man probably in America, thou knowest I do not flatter young artists much, I never said this to him, but I think so".[2]:122 Audubon hired Mason as his assistant to paint the floral backgrounds of his bird pictures as they traveled south down the Ohio and Mississippi rivers to New Orleans.[4] A good shot, Mason also undertook other expedition duties, shooting many specimen birds as well as rowing the boat and ferrying supplies.[6]

Traveling with Audubon

During the two years he traveled with Audubon (October 1820 to August 1822), Mason painted, by his own reckoning, between 150 and 200 background watercolors for Audubon.[2]:127 Over 50 of these were used, uncredited, in Audubon's book of 450 bird paintings.[4] For example, for Audubon's study of two blue yellow-backed warblers (now known as northern parula birds; plate 15 of Birds of America), Mason painted an image of Iris fulva, the copper iris, which Audubon called Louisiana flag.[7] Similarly, plate 73 shows Mason's painting of a branch of Magnolia grandiflora (southern magnolia, called by Audubon great magnolia) on which is perched a Canada warbler (called by Audubon Bonaparte's flycatching warbler).[2]:129 A former curator of the National Gallery of Art considers that Mason's backgrounds significantly contribute to the scientific worth of Audubon's project because of how they help to establish scale, proportion, and environment.[1]

Uncredited work

It appears that Audubon may not have intended to give Mason credit for his work, as he had Mason sign his name in pencil while he signed his own name to the finished works in ink.[3][1][2]:129 By the mid 1830s, Mason was unhappy with how Audubon had treated him,[2]:124 and in 1834 he wrote of Audubon in a letter to the author and critic John Neal:

I looked on him as my greatest friend; and it never once entered my mind that he would do me injustice when he came to publish his work. This it appears he has done.[2]:126

Neal would go on to express serious reservations about Audubon's honesty and trustworthiness in several 1835 issues of The New England Galaxy, of which he was then senior editor.[2]:124 Among other things, he alleges that Audubon had promised Mason that his name would be on the relevant plates of The Birds of America.[2]:131

Later life

Mason returned to Cincinnati in 1822 to assist his mother, who was then newly widowed.[4] Mason lived in Cincinnati for the remainder of his life except for a couple of years in Philadelphia (1829–32) and short trips to Michigan (1840–41) and Indiana (1841).[3] He established himself as a private art teacher and portrait painter; this later work is rather wooden compared to his botanical paintings.[3][8]

Death and legacy

He died of pneumonia on October 8, 1842.[4] In the early 2000s, wildlife artist John Ruthven became interested in Mason's life and determined to track down his grave, the location of which was then unknown. Ruthven discovered that Mason had originally been buried in a downtown cemetery and was later moved to Spring Grove Cemetery and Arboretum. Ruthven joined forces with other Cincinnati civic leaders to create a bronze relief marker memorializing Mason's contribution to the monumental Birds of America; it was dedicated in 2013.[4]

Note

  1. The birth date used here comes from his tombstone. Other birth dates—1802 and 1807—have been used in various sources. The year of his birth has been disputed in part because of statements by Audubon, in part because Mason has been confused at times with another Joseph Mason who is listed in census records as living in Ohio around the same time.[1]:181 If he was born in 1807, he would have been only 13 rather than 18 when he accompanied Audubon, which seems improbable; however, the most careful source on this subject (Richards) presents credible evidence that Mason may in fact have been 13 and passed for 18 due to being unusually large and adept for his age.[2]:129

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 Pennington, Estill Curtis. Lessons in Likeness: Portrait Painters in Kentucky and the Ohio River Valley, 1802–1920. University Press of Kentucky, 2011, pp. 180–81.
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.4 2.5 2.6 2.7 2.8 Richards, Irving T. "Joseph R. Mason and John Neal". American Literature, vol. 6, no. 2 (May 1934), pp. 122–40.
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 3.4 Haverstock, Mary Sayre, et al, eds. Artists in Ohio, 1787–1900: A Biographical Dictionary. Kent State University Press, 2000, p. 578.
  4. 4.0 4.1 4.2 4.3 4.4 4.5 Burt, DeVere. "The Joseph Mason Project, Historic Spring Grove Cemetery and Arboretum". Ruthven.com website. Accessed December 17, 2015.
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  6. Stern, Liz. "Blast From the Past: Everyone Needs a Good Assistant". New York Historical Society website, March 8, 2013. Accessed December 17, 2015.
  7. Musacchia, Joe. "Understanding Louisiana Iris Part 2: I fulva".World of Irises, the blog of the American Iris Society, June 1, 2015. Accessed December 18, 2015.
  8. "Portrait of Marie Jane Andrew". Indianapolis Museum of Art website. Accessed December 17, 2015.