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Cowles Art School

1883 establishments in Massachusetts1883 in the arts1900 disestablishments in MassachusettsAC with 0 elementsArt schools in Massachusetts
Boston stubsCultural history of BostonDefunct private universities and colleges in MassachusettsEducational institutions disestablished in 1900Educational institutions established in 1883Universities and colleges in BostonVisual arts stubs
Elizabeth Okie Paxton, 1877 1971
Elizabeth Okie Paxton, 1877 1971

Cowles Art School (aka Cowles School of Art) was a studio building on 148 Dartmouth Street, Boston, Massachusetts, United States, that was established in 1883 and continued operation until 1900. It was one of the largest art schools in the city, having several hundred scholars. By the end of the 19th century, Boston had become an important art center. A number of highly respected artists were teaching in the city. The rich environment for art had been promoted at least in part by the Massachusetts Drawing Act of 1870. The act mandated drawing lessons in public schools. To fill the need for art teachers, Massachusetts Normal Art (MNA) was established in 1873. Two blocks behind the Museum of Fine Arts, in the New Studio Building near the Back Bay Station, was the Cowles Art School (1883). Cowles Art School offered instruction in figure drawing and painting from the flat cast and life, artistic anatomy, perspective and composition, painting still life, drawing and painting the head from life, drawing still life, oil and water colors, ad perspective.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Cowles Art School (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Cowles Art School
Dartmouth Street, Boston Back Bay

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N 42.347691666667 ° E -71.076266666667 °
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Dartmouth Street 160
02116 Boston, Back Bay
Massachusetts, United States
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Elizabeth Okie Paxton, 1877 1971
Elizabeth Okie Paxton, 1877 1971
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Nearby Places

John Hancock Tower
John Hancock Tower

200 Clarendon Street, previously John Hancock Tower and colloquially known as The Hancock, is a 62-story, 790-foot (240 m) skyscraper in the Back Bay neighborhood of Boston. It is the tallest building in New England. The tower was designed by Henry N. Cobb of the firm I. M. Pei & Partners and was completed in 1976.The building is widely known for its prominent structural flaws, including an analysis that the entire building could overturn under certain wind loads—as well as a prominent design failure of its signature blue windows, which allowed any of the 500-lb. window panes to detach and fall—up to the full height of the building—endangering pedestrians below. In 1977, the American Institute of Architects presented the firm with a National Honor Award for the building, and in 2011 conferred on it the Twenty-five Year Award. It has been the tallest building in Boston and New England since 1976. The street address is 200 Clarendon Street, but occupants also use "Hancock Place" as a mailing address for offices in the building. John Hancock Insurance was the primary tenant of the building at opening, but the company announced in 2004 that some offices would relocate to a new building at 601 Congress Street, in Fort Point, Boston. The tower was originally named for the insurance company that occupied it. The insurance company, in turn, was named for John Hancock, whose large and conspicuous signature on the Declaration of Independence made his name so famous in the United States that a colloquialism for a signature is "a John Hancock".