“Untouched by Time,” a painting by Grif Teller was most likely completed in the early 1930’s. Examples of this painting can be seen on advertising calendars produced by the Osborne Company in the 1930’s, 1940’s and early 1950’s. The Osborne Company, through the development of several innovations of the color printing process, achieved national status in the early 1900s. In 1932, the company moved into new facilities in Clifton, New Jersey and was positioned as one of the largest full-color printing companies in the world. Subsidiary companies produced Children's Books, posters, blotters, timetables, puzzles and other printed advertising forms. Contests were held in which salesmen with the largest sales were awarded an original work of art from the company collection. There were many large American business clients that engaged the Osborne Company for printed calendars, timetables, posters and playing cards. The Osborne Company ceased to exist by 1958. Grif Teller was most widely known for painting a long series of calendar art for the Pennsylvania Railroad, once the largest and most influential transportation company in the United States. For more than 30 years, Grif captured on canvas the spirit and soul of the Pennsy, working each year to produce a single oil painting to represent the giant carrier that employed hundreds of thousands of people and whose rails stretched into 14 states. The paintings enjoyed wide exposure as the center pieces of the railroad’s annual wall calendar -- more than 300,000 copies of each year’s edition were printed and distributed to customers, shippers and friends of the railroad throughout the world. Grif painted the lion’s share of the Pennsy’s calendar art; the series lasted from 1925 through 1958, and of those, he painted the scenes for 1928 through 1942 and 1947 through 1958. These paintings also found their way onto desk and pocket calendars, playing cards, postcards and the covers of timetables, maps, and annual reports. Even after the wall calendar era closed in 1958, Grif continued to paint for the PRR, producing two scenes used in desk and wallet calendars for 1960 and 1961. Born December 9, 1899, as the son of an insurance agent, Grif grew up around Newark, New Jersey, never far from the steam engine whistles of the nearby Erie and Lackawanna railroads. He graduated from the School of Fine and Industrial Arts in Newark and went to work in 1918 for the Osborne Company in the same city. While working in the Osborne shipping department, he took night classes at the Art Students’ League of New York. Osborne became the key to his future as portraitist of the PRR, for it was a large and pioneering art calendar and advertising company that employed hundreds of salesman across the nation and in Canada and Australia. Osborne was sold to the American Colortype Company in 1954, and Grif remained for about a year thereafter before going to work for New York photographer, Leo Aarons, painting scenic backdrops. He completed the last few PRR scenes as a freelancer, painting them in his home. After Aarons closed his New York studio, Grif worked for the Rae Publishing Company of Cedar Grove, New Jersey, and retired from commercial art in 1968. Grif remained active painting barns and landscapes, and filling orders for railroad paintings commissioned by a new generation of rail buffs. He painted more than 60 rail scenes after being rediscovered by the railfan community in 1974. Most of them were large 24 x 36 inch canvases, about 2/3 the size the PRR commissioned. Among Grif’s hobbies were music, gardening, fishing and travel -- the latter of which he used to gather ideas for painting subjects. Some of his favorite destinations were Vermont and upstate New York. He exhibited his works at the National Academy of Design. Grif married his late wife, Mabel, in 1928 and lived in Little Falls, New Jersey, occupying the same house from 1937-1992. Grif and Mabel raised two sons and a daughter there. Grif Teller died on April 8, 1993. Additional information about Grif Teller may be found in the following: BOOKS: Crossroads of Commerce, The Pennsylvania Railroad Calendar Art of Grif Teller by Dan Cupper ©1992, Great Eastern Publishing Company ISBN 0-9625602-1-9 Crossroads of Commerce, The Pennsylvania Railroad Calendar Art of Grif Teller by Dan Cupper ©2003, Stackpole Books ISBN 0-8117-2903-6 Visions of the Pennsylvania Railroad ©1992, The Penn Central Corporation Library of Congress Catalog Card Number 91-62817 ISBN 0-916371-11-5 PERIODICALS: The Pennsy, Volume 2 Number 1, January 1953 “Grif Teller, PRR Calendar Artist” The Keystone, Volume 11, Number 2, June 1978 “Grif Teller, Visions of a Railroad” by Walter P. Keely Trains, Volume 40 Number 2, December 1979 “Grif Teller’s Trains” by Walter Martin Americana, Volume 16 Number 1, March/April 1988 “Trains of Yesterday” by Karl Zimmermann The Keystone, Volume 22, Number 4, Winter 1989 “At the Crossroads of Commerce” by Dan Cupper Pennsylvania Heritage, Volume 16 Number 1, Winter 1990 “Grif Teller’s Pennsy” by Dan Cupper The Keystone, Volume 32, Number 4, Winter 1999 “Grif Teller, Artist Remembered” by Ken Murry
The painting is called "Pygmalion and Galatea" painted by JL Gerome.
Odilon Redon
There is no famous painting, called mona liza. The famous painting by Leonardo da Vinci is called 'Mona Lisa'.
I don't know if this is the artist you are looking for but an artist with the last name Dupont is: Gainsborough Dupont. However, the painting you are describing reminds me of a painting called "Lady with a parasol" by Monet. Hope this helps.
Less than $100 USD
This is called modification.
Jackson pollock
yes there is
self portrait
The painting is called "Pygmalion and Galatea" painted by JL Gerome.
John Piper, painted 1769.
Sorry - painting is a watercolour and is dated 1922
Odilon Redon
There is no famous painting, called mona liza. The famous painting by Leonardo da Vinci is called 'Mona Lisa'.
A painting! The surface that an artist works on, be it paper, canvas or other, is called the "ground."
The painting is titled, "The Greatest Dawn in American History - February 22, 1732." It depicts Washington's birthplace, Wakefield at Pope's Creek, Westmoreland County, Virginia. The painting was completed in 1931 by Grif Teller. It was used to promote the bicentennial anniversary of Washington's birth in 1932.
No, the artist who painted cherry ripe also painted bubbles which was a pears poster