he has furnished illustrations for Harper's Magazine, and has had the direction of the Art Department of Harper's publishing-house. Works: Salem (1876); November (1877); Gravesend Bay (1878); Old Orchard—Long Island (1884).
PARTHENON, Sanford R. Gifford, Corcoran
Gallery, Washington; canvas, H. 2
ft. 4 in. × 4 ft 4 in. View looking south
from the Acropolis over the head of the Saronic
Gulf; at the left, the Parthenon; at
the right, the Erechtheum. Painted in
1880.
PARTON, ARTHUR, born at Hudson,
N. Y., March 26, 1842. Landscape painter,
pupil of W. T. Richards, of Philadelphia.
Visited Paris and London in 1870, and
sketched in Scotland the following summer.
Elected an A.N.A. in 1873; N.A. in 1884.
Studio in New York. Works: On the Road
to Mount Marcy (1874), Charles Farwell,
Chicago; Mountain Brook (1875), A. T.
Stewart Collection, New York; Stirling
Castle, Solitude (1876); November (Lord
Moncke); Sycamores in Old Shokan (Amherst
Collection); Delaware River, near Milford
(1879); Buttonball Trees on the Housatonic
(1880); Night-fall, Old Home in the
Catskills (1881); Sycamores by the River-*side
(1882); River Marsh (1883); Morning
Ride, Passing Shower, Pine Wood (1884);
Winter Morning, June Day in the Catskills,
In the Gloaming (1885); Midday, Veteran
of the Woods (1886).
PARTON, ERNEST, born at Hudson, N.
Y., in 1845. Landscape painter, pupil in
New York of his brother, Arthur Parton;
visited England in 1873, and has since lived
in London; was in New York in 1884-86.
Has made sketching tours in Italy and in
Switzerland. Exhibits at Royal Academy
and Grosvenor Gallery. Works: Morning
Mist (1873); Papa's Luncheon (1875);
Placid Stream (1876); Sunny September,
High Hall Garden (1877); Silent Pool, Reflections,
Au bord de l'eau (1878); Waning
of the Year, Midday (1879); Silver and Gold
(1882); Old River-side Tree, Falling Leaves
and Fading Trees, Banks of the Llugwy
(1883); Where Memory Dwells, Vale of
Light (1884); Streatley-on-Thames (1885);
Last of October (1886).
PASIAS, painter, Sicyonic school, pupil
of Erigonus, about B.C. 220. He was brother
of the sculptor Ægineta.—Pliny, xxxv. 40
[145].
PASINELLI, LORENZO, born in Bologna
in 1629, died there in 1700. Bolognese
school; pupil of Simone Cantarini
and of Flaminio Torre; afterwards studied
in Vienna works of Paolo Veronese, and
imitated his style, though not servilely.
After painting in Rome, where he studied
the designs of Raphael, he returned to Bologna
and taught at the same time with
Cignani, though he never attained the reputation
of that artist. Works: Miracle of
St. Antonio, S. Petronius, Bologna; Apparition
of Christ, and Entry into Jerusalem
(1657), Church of Public Cemetery, ib.;
Madonna and St. Joseph, Scalzi, ib.; Martyrdom
of St. Catharine, St. Margaret, Pinacoteca,
ib.; The Magdalen (1680), St. Mary,
Liechtenstein Gallery, Vienna.—Lanzi, iii.
142; Ch. Blanc, École bolonaise; Gualandi,
9, 14, 110.
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PASINI, ALBERTO, born at Busseto,
near Parma; contemporary.
Genre
painter, pupil of Eugenio
Ciceri, of E.
Isabey, and Théodore
Rousseau; paints
chiefly subjects taken
from Turkey, Arabia,
and Persia, where he
lived several years.
His treatment is
broad, the light effects in his pictures are
often peculiar, and the aërial perspective
especially fine. Honorary professor at
Parma and Turin Academies. Medals:
Paris, 3d class, 1859; 2d class, 1863, 1864;
L. of Honour, 1868; Officer, 1878. Works:
Shah of Persia travelling through his Country;
Caravan in the Desert. Florence Acad-