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(Ernest) Bruce Nelson
was born on June 13, 1888 in Santa Clara, California. He studied at
Stanford University under Robert B. Harshe, the Art Students' League
of New York, and at the Woodstock Summer School (ASL) under John F.
Carlson and Birge Harrison. He maintained studio locations and
residences at Palo Alto, San Jose and Pacific Grove, California.
In 1912 he exhibited twenty paintings at the galleries of Helgesen &
Marshall in San Francisco, and later in November 1914 he exhibited
twenty-four more paintings with the same gallery. He exhibited in
Los Angeles in May, 1914, and at the Oakland Art Gallery in 1916 and
with the San Francisco Art Association.
In 1914, Anthony Anderson, art critic for the "Los Angeles Times"
newspaper, described Nelson's works as, "lively and delicate, full
of light and air, of brooding sunshine and permeating mists". Bruce
Nelson painted coastal seascapes, coastal valleys, and coastal
villages. The location of many of Bruce Nelson's paintings are
unknown. The exact date and place of death of Bruce Nelson are
unknown.
Bruce Nelson held a membership at the San Francisco Art Association,
and he won the Silver Medal at the Panama-Pacific International
Exposition in 1915 and the Honorable Mention at the Woodstock Summer
School in New York, 1911.
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