Artist

George Cooke

born St. Mary's, MD 1793-died New Orleans, LA 1849
Also known as
  • G. Cooke
Born
St. Mary's, Maryland, United States
Died
New Orleans, Louisiana, United States
Biography

Born March 14 (or 17), 1793, in St. Mary's County, Md. Entered into various businesses at St. Mary's, about 1810–12; Georgetown, D.C., 1812–16; and Richmond, Va., 1816–18, where he married Mary Ann Heath, 1816. Went West, 1818. Returned to Washington and studied painting with Charles Bird King, 1819–20. Studied in Italy and France, 1826–31. During the years 1831–49, was an itinerant from New York to New Orleans. With the backing of Daniel Pratt, opened the National Gallery of Painting in New Orleans, 1844–49. Pratt added a gallery to his home in Prattville, Ala., expressly to display Cooke's paintings. Died March 26, 1849, in New Orleans, La. Buried in Prattville, Ala.

Andrew J. Cosentino and Henry H. Glassie The Capital Image: Painters in Washington, 1800–1915 (Washington, D.C.: Smithsonian Institution Press for the National Museum of American Art, 1983)

Works by this artist (1 item)

George Cooke, William James Bennett, City of Washington from beyond the Navy Yard, 1834, hand-colored aquatint on paper, Smithsonian American Art Museum, Gift of International Business Machines Corporation, 1966.48.24
City of Washington from beyond the Navy Yard
Date1834
hand-colored aquatint on paper
Not on view