Walter Granville-Smith

Walter Granville-Smith (1870–1938) was an illustrator and painter who was born in South Granville, New York on January 28, 1870. He is notable for producing the first colored illustration that appeared in the United States. Granville-Smith and his wife, Jessie, had a daughter Jesse and sons, Walter. and Edward. Granville-Smith died on December 7, 1938, at his daughter's home in Jackson Heights, Queens, New York.

Granville-Smith was a National Academician in 1915 with the National Academy of Design and served as president of the Salmagundi Club in New York from 1924 to 1926. His works are part of the permanent collections of the Smithsonian Institution (Grey Day), Butler Institute of American Art (The Willow), Toledo Museum of Art (South Haven Mill), the Currier Museum of Art (Truth), the Salmagundi Club, the Lotos Club, the Fencers Club of New York and the Art Club of Philadelphia. Many of his works can be seen at the Athenaeum website.

Career
Granville-Smith attended the Newark Academy in Newark, New Jersey. He received his first instruction in painting from David McClure and as a teenager he studied under Walter Satterlee. He then studied at the Art Students League of New York under Willard Metcalf and James Carroll Beckwith.

Granville-Smith started his career as a magazine illustrator. His illustrations appeared in Harper’s Magazine, Century Illustrated Monthly Magazine, Metropolitan Magazine, and Collier's. He was noted for his pioneering work in color. As an illustrator, he produced the first colored illustration to appear in the United States, for Gertrude Atherton’s A Christmas Witch, in the January 1893 issue of Godey’s Lady’s Book

In 1897 Granville-Smith toured Europe, visiting Holland, Belgium, and France. In Paris he studied at the Academie Julien. After 1900 Granville-Smith focused on landscape painting. He acquired a summer home in Bellport, New York in 1908, and this area became a frequent subject of his landscape and seascape paintings. His New York Studio was located at 96 Fifth Avenue. His work was part of the painting event in the art competition at the 1928 Summer Olympics.

Awards
Granville-Smith won numerous art awards, including
 * Third Hallgarten prize, National Academy of Design, 1900
 * Bronze medal, Charleston Expo., 1902
 * Evans prize, American Watercolor Society, 1905
 * First prize, Worcester Art Museum, 1906
 * Hon. Mention, Carnegie Institute, Pittsburgh, 1907
 * Inness gold medal, National Academy of Design, 1908
 * Bronze medal, Buenos Aires Expo, 1910
 * Vezin Prize, Salmagundi Club, 1911
 * Shaw purchase prize, Salmagundi Club, 1913
 * Hudnut prize, American Watercolor Society, 1916
 * Isidor prize, Salmagundi Club, 1918
 * Turnbull prize, 1922
 * Auction Exhibition prize, 1925
 * Carnegie prize, National Academy of Design, 1927
 * Purchase prize, Salmagundi Club, 1928
 * Second Altman prize, National Academy of Design, 1929
 * First Altman prize, National Academy of Design, 1933