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A
native Californian, Guy Rose was born in San Gabriel, CA on March 3,
1867. He was the son of a former senator who was a large Southern
California landholder and rancher (the town of Rosemead and the
boulevard bearing that name are in honor of the Rose family).
After graduating from Los Angeles High School, he moved to San
Francisco where he began his art training at the School of Design
under Virgil Williams and Emil Carlsen. In 1888 he further studied
in Paris under Constant, Lefebvre and Doucet at Academie Julian. In
1894 he received an honorable mention at the Paris Salon, the first
Californian to receive an award from that prestigious institution.
Returning to New York City in the mid-1890’s, Rose worked at
Harper’s, Scribner’s and Century. In 1899, he was back in France
where he bought a cottage in Giverny, and it was there that he was
greatly influenced by Claude Monet and the French Impressionists.
He suffered from recurring lead poisoning which affected his vision
and crippled his hands, and was unable to paint for various periods
of time. In 1912 he returned to New York, and two years later made
his final move back to Pasadena where he taught and served as
director at the Stickney School of Art.
In 1920 he again suffered lead poisoning, and a stroke the following
year left him paralyzed.
His oeuvre includes coastal scenes, missions, figures and landscapes
of California and France for which he is internationally known.
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