Francis Blackwell Mayer. Francis Blackwell Mayer was a prominent 19th-century American genre painter from Maryland.
   While he spent most of his life in that state, he took a trip to the western frontier in the mid-nineteenth century and executed a series of drawings of Native Americans; he also studied in Paris for five years in the 1860s. Primarily known for his oil paintings and watercolors, he also worked in other media, including pen and crayon drawings, engraving, and illustrating.
   Many of his work have historic themes. Francis Blackwell Mayer was born in Baltimore, Maryland, on December 27, 1827, the son of Charles Mayer and Eliza Blackwell Mayer.
   He was one of three sons, Henry Christian Mayer, the son of his father with his first wife, and Alfred M. Mayer, who became a noted physicist, being the other two. An uncle, Brantz Mayer, was a noted author.
   Frank Blackwell Mayer studied art in Baltimore with Alfred Jacob Miller and Ernest Fischer in the 1840s and in Paris with Charles Gleyre and Gustave Brion between 1864 and 1869, specializing in oil paintings and crayon drawings. He lived in Paris from 1862 to 1870, where his artwork was exhibited at annual expositions in both London and Paris. Frank Blackwell Mayer in 1851, drawing by Ashton White Frank B. Mayer began his work to form the Maryland Art Association on March 14, 1847 and the association met in his studio once a week. He went on to work
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