NEW YORK, NY.- The first complete
biography of Charles Callahan Perkins (1823-1886), the noted Art Historian who founded the Boston Museum of Fine Arts and who played a key role in the introduction of Art Education to the United States is slated for publication on July 4th which will mark the 150th anniversary of the dedication of the Boston Museum of Fine Arts.
Charles Callahan Perkins was born in Boston, the scion of fabulously wealthy heirs to a China Trade Fortune. His father died young and after his mother remarried George Washington Doane, the Episcopal Bishop of New Jersey, Perkins was raised by a variety of guardians and mentors including Karl Follen (the Transcendentalist associate of Ralph Waldo Emerson), and the poet Henry Wadsworth Longfellow. He attended Harvard and then traveled to Europe to study Art (with Ary Scheffer in Paris) and Music (with Ignaz Moscheles in Leipzig). He was hailed as a musical prodigy in his youth; as a young man he composed the First Symphony by a native born composer performed in the United States; he delivered the First College Level Lectures in the country on the History of Art; was acclaimed in both the United States and in Europe for his groundbreaking histories of Early Italian Sculptors and his scholarly biographies of Raphael, Michelangelo and Ghiberti; and was honored as the first American member of the French Académie des Beaux-Arts. As a patron of the arts, he played a critical role encouraging the sculptor Thomas Crawford, whose Statue of Freedom crowns the U.S. Capitol Dome to this day. He revived the popular Boston Art Club, was the largest benefactor in the establishment of the country's first symphony hall, the Boston Music Hall, and led the Handel and Haydn Society for many years. THE EDUCATION OF CHARLES CALLAHAN PERKINS; HOW ART CAME TO AMERICA provides a vivid portrayal of the American expatriates who lived in Paris, Rome, and Florence in the mid-nineteenth century and an important account of how (and why) they returned to this country and, led by Perkins, founded the Boston Museum of Fine Arts and, through his leadership on the Boston School Committee, introduced universal Art Education to the American schools, and in doing so, transformed the cultural life of the United States.
Edward N. Perkins was born in New York City in 1951. He was raised in Bethlehem, Pennsylvania and Tyringham, Massachusetts, and educated at St. Pauls School and the University of Denver. He was a founder of the publishing house Applewood Books and for many years managed the Excelsior Printing division of Crane & Co. He is the great-great-grandson of Charles Callahan Perkins and in writing this biography was able to access many family letters and records which had never before been available to scholars. He lives in Bennington, Vermont with his wife Cathy, a cat and a dog.
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