William Lathrop. William Langson Lathrop was an American Impressionist landscape painter and founder of the art colony at New Hope, Pennsylvania.
   He is sometimes referred to as a Pennsylvania Impressionist. Lathrop was a member of the National Academy of Design and served on numerous exhibition juries during his career.
   He received a gold medal at the Panama-Pacific International Exposition in San Francisco, California, which showcased works by many of the major American artists of the time. Today, Lathrop's paintings are in numerous museum collections including the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City, and the Smithsonian American Art Museum in Washington, D.C.
   Lathrop was born in Painesville, Ohio and grew up on his family's farm. Lathrop began his art career in New York City in the late 1870s as an illustrator and part-time etcher, both pursuits that earned him little money.
   In the late 1880s Lathrop traveled to Europe where he met and married his wife. Returning to America, Lathrop endured financial difficulty and briefly turned away from art before friends convinced him to enter his watercolors in a prestigious New York show. Lathrop received the top prize and a glowing review in The New York Times, and his career was launched. In 1899 Lathrop and his family moved to New Hope, on the Delaware Canal, alongside the Delaware River, just north of the village New Hope, Pennsylvania. Othe
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