Francis S. Frost
American, 1825-1902
American 19th Century Paintings, Francis S. Frost, Lake Winnepaoseki
“Lake Winnepaoseki”
Signed and lower right
28 x 50 inches
Framed: 36 x 58 inches
Francis Seth Frost, usually referred to incorrectly as Francis Shedd Frost, was born in West Cambridge, Massachusetts in late April 1825 to Anstress Trow, a native of Mont Vernon, New Hampshire. Whether Frost had any artistic training is unknown, but he clearly was painting by the late 1840's. In 1853 Frost climbed to the Tip Top House on Mount Washington, establishing himself as one of the first visitors to the White Mountains and Lakes Region of New Hampshire. His first known painting, View of Tuckerman's Ravine, was exhibited at the Boston Athenaeum's spring 1854 exhibition. For the next half century, Frost traveled throughout New England, the Hudson River Valley, and the Western United States producing an extensive, now mostly lost, collection of paintings.

As with many of the artists, he had characteristics that help identify his works. Frost painted wispy, longitudinal clouds. He almost always painted water in the foreground. His most distinguishing characteristic is very tiny figures that appear in his foregrounds as is the case with this painting. We see two figures walking along a dirt path. He also painted, on occasion, in an oval format.

Frost was a founding member of the Boston Art Club. He painted in the Rocky Mountains with Bierstadt in 1859. Contrary to popular myth, Frost did not abscond with Bierstadt's wife. By 1859 Frost had been married to his wife of 53 years, Almira, for ten years.

In the 1850's and early 1860's, Frost's artistic reputation seemed fixed. He was known familiarly in the press as "Frost" and was referred to in casual company with Champney, Gerry, Shattuck, and others. He exhibited at the Boston Athenaeum from 1854 to 1864. But, in the late 1860's his eminence receded and, in 1990, only seven paintings by Frost were documented in the Inventory of American Paintings at the Smithsonian Institution.

Frost died in Arlington, Massachusetts, in 1902 and was buried in Mount Auburn Cemetery.

Exhibition
Boston Athenaeum 1854
Albert Bierstadt’s New Bedford Exhibit 1858
Boston Art Club 1875
© 2006 Vincent Vallarino Fine Art ltd.