jacke
![](https://veryimportantlot.com/cache/catalog/4270/KCuVnvVnp_TB7Y64SKc0XIYbws0fMuYGDpGVM1ebsnlfiAkZCcdhnsCphvJstEWe_1715000104-172x196_center_100.jpg)
![](/assets/image/logo_38123/39eeb/fix172196logo38123__fix_172_196.jpeg)
![](/assets/image/logo_38123/08413/fix172172logo38123__fix_172_172.jpeg)
![](https://veryimportantlot.com/uploads/art_data/Artist/17322/John Ernst Steinbeck2.jpg)
![](https://veryimportantlot.com/cache/catalog/4363/NSLbJEENqSBWO3Re_NePL4jAtcdNtkvBzMPM8NqFVZhUuIN9lY7HJoFgZtrgfjIg_1717579597-172x196_center_100.jpg)
![](https://veryimportantlot.com/uploads/art_data/Artist/479/Andrew Wyeth2.jpg)
Andrew Newell Wyeth, an American visual artist, is renowned for his mastery in realism and regionalism. Born in 1917 in Chadds Ford, Pennsylvania, Wyeth was primarily a realist painter, deeply influenced by his father, N.C. Wyeth, a notable artist himself. Andrew's artwork, characterized by its clear, razor-sharp technique and a hauntingly eerie atmosphere, often depicted the land and people around him in rural Pennsylvania and Maine.
Wyeth's most celebrated work, Christina's World (1948), is housed in the Museum of Modern Art in New York City. This painting illustrates a woman lying in a field, looking toward a distant farmhouse, an image that has become an icon of American art due to its emotional depth and simplicity of composition. The work encapsulates Wyeth's ability to invoke profound personal and emotional landscapes through the meticulous depiction of physical settings and figures.
Andrew Newell Wyeth continued painting almost up until his death in 2009, leaving behind a vast legacy that has influenced many artists. His works remain highly valued by collectors and are often featured in major museums and galleries worldwide. To stay updated on exhibitions and sales of Andrew Wyeth’s art, sign up for our newsletter—ensuring you're informed about the latest auction events and product sales related to this profound artist.
![](https://veryimportantlot.com/uploads/art_data/Artist/16704/Robert Louis Stevenson2.jpg)
Robert Louis Stevenson, born Robert Lewis Balfour Stevenson, was a Scottish poet and writer, a major exponent of Neo-Romanticism.
He began studying engineering at the University of Edinburgh, but later began to study law. However, he was fascinated by literature, and already during his studies the student printed in periodicals. Stevenson was an avid traveler and also published several books about his travels. In 1881, he began serializing pirate stories, which were formalized into a book, Treasure Island, in 1883. The book became an instant bestseller. Next were adventure novels "Kidnapped" (1886), "The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde" (1886), "The Master of Ballantrae" (1889) and others, as well as many novels and short stories, ballads.
Robert Lewis Stevenson was very sickly from early childhood, and readers would not have guessed that he wrote his most exciting adventures while nearly bedridden. He died at the age of 44 from a cerebral hemorrhage. And Treasure Island remains one of the greatest and most popular adventure novels in the English language. It has been translated, reprinted and screened around the world many times.
![](https://veryimportantlot.com/cache/catalog/4363/NSLbJEENqSBWO3Re_NePL4jAtcdNtkvBzMPM8NqFVZhUuIN9lY7HJoFgZtrgfjIg_1717579597-172x196_center_100.jpg)
![](https://veryimportantlot.com/uploads/art_data/Artist/16756/John Fitzgerald Kennedy.jpg)
John Fitzgerald Kennedy was an American politician and statesman, 35th President of the United States (1961-1963).
John was born in a family of natives of Ireland, his father - Joseph Kennedy - a Democratic politician, who headed the Securities and Exchange Commission in the 1930s, was U.S. Ambassador to Great Britain. John studied at Harvard and Princeton Universities and traveled to Europe in 1937. During World War II he served in the U.S. Navy and received a number of awards, and immediately after the war he entered politics.
In 1946, John F. Kennedy was elected to the U.S. House of Representatives from Massachusetts, in 1952, with the help of financial support from the Kennedy family won election to the Senate and held the post until the end of 1960. In the presidential election of 1960, 43-year-old Kennedy with a small margin of victory over Richard Nixon, becoming the 35th President of the United States.
The time of Kennedy's presidency was marked by the escalation of the Cold War. Its peak was the Cuban Missile Crisis in 1962, when the confrontation between Washington and Moscow almost led to nuclear war. With great difficulty the parties managed to reach a compromise - during the negotiations the USSR undertook to remove missiles from Cuba in return for the dismantling of American missiles in Turkey. Since the beginning of 1963, the U.S. President increasingly spoke out in favor of peaceful coexistence with the Soviet Union. In August 1963, the U.S., USSR and Great Britain signed a treaty banning nuclear weapons tests in the atmosphere, outer space and underwater, which entered into force in October 1963. In the same 1963, when the country was hit by a wave of protests of the colored population, he introduced a bill in Congress that banned segregation in public places.
On November 22, 1963, during a trip to Dallas, Texas, John F. Kennedy was fatally wounded. He was 46 years old. Lee Harvey Oswald was held as the prime suspect in the assassination, who was shot and killed two days later by Jack Ruby in the garage of the Dallas police station. There are various versions of the reasons for the President's assassination, but none of them has been fully proven so far.
In his free time from politics, John F. Kennedy managed to write a book "Stories of Courage", for which he received the Pulitzer Prize in 1957. These are biographies of people whom he considered to be models of courage in politics. In 1958, Kennedy published a book called A Nation of Immigrants.
![](https://veryimportantlot.com/cache/catalog/4363/NSLbJEENqSBWO3Re_NePL4jAtcdNtkvBzMPM8NqFVZhUuIN9lY7HJoFgZtrgfjIg_1717579597-172x196_center_100.jpg)
![](https://veryimportantlot.com/uploads/art_data/Artist/4418/J_F_Herring.jpg)
John Frederick Herring the Elder was a British painter of Victorian England.
John had a passion for horses and painting from a young age. In his spare time from his day job as a sign painter and coachman, Herring painted horses for innkeepers and customers. Developing his talent, John specialized in drawing animals and loved to depict sporting events with horses. His impressive and vivid depictions of racehorses, cows and ducks as well as picturesque hunting scenes caught the eye of Queen Victoria. In 1845 Herring was appointed animal painter to Her Royal Highness the Duchess of Kent, followed by a commission from the reigning Queen Victoria, who remained a patron for the rest of his life.
A highly successful and prolific artist, Herring is considered one of the most important animal painters of mid-19th century Europe. He exhibited at the Royal Academy, the British Institution, and the Society of British Artists, where Herring became vice-president in 1842. Three of his sons also became artists.
![](https://veryimportantlot.com/cache/catalog/4363/NSLbJEENqSBWO3Re_NePL4jAtcdNtkvBzMPM8NqFVZhUuIN9lY7HJoFgZtrgfjIg_1717579597-172x196_center_100.jpg)
![](https://veryimportantlot.com/cache/catalog/4335/CtfH3LrjEUwczmzCJwjuZlBLd7HILl7SKAxlJa3HZZ2t9XHLIW6cz38PZGVpOEX6_1716382010-172x196_center_100.jpg)
![](/assets/image/logo_24149/d3e27/fix172196logo24149__fix_172_196.jpeg)
![](/assets/image/logo_24149/10041/fix172172logo24149__fix_172_172.jpeg)
![](/assets/image/logo_13734/01e3f/fix172196logo13734__fix_172_196.jpeg)
![](/assets/image/logo_13734/72ef8/fix172172logo13734__fix_172_172.jpeg)
![](/assets/image/logo_18621/45485/fix172196logo18621__fix_172_196.jpeg)
![](/assets/image/logo_18621/02f7e/fix172172logo18621__fix_172_172.jpeg)
![](/assets/image/logo_23170/1a06f/fix172196logo23170__fix_172_196.jpeg)
![](/assets/image/logo_23170/51861/fix172172logo23170__fix_172_172.jpeg)
![](https://veryimportantlot.com/cache/catalog/4289/3oYlx8oiddiIPWIi71WwVyV9ntvn4oCIo_pbrjWJ7dKhOyKEjwOqbp2SwgyWlNcG_1715681237-172x196_center_100.jpg)
![](https://veryimportantlot.com/uploads/art_data/Artist/15493/John Ronald Reuel Tolkien.jpg)
John Ronald Reuel Tolkien was a British writer and poet, translator, philologist, and linguist.
Tolkien wrote many works in the genre of magical fiction. He became world famous for his fantasy books The Hobbit (1937) and The Lord of the Rings (1954-55).
"The Hobbit" was published in 1937 with drawings by the author and proved so popular that the publisher asked him to write a sequel. The result, 17 years later, was Tolkien's masterpiece, "The Lord of the Rings," which was voted the best book of the 20th century. By the beginning of the 21st century, more than 50 million copies had been sold in 30 languages. The film version of "The Lord of the Rings" by New Zealand director Peter Jackson, released in three parts in 2001-2003, broke world viewing records.
Tolkien has been called the "father" of modern high fantasy literature.
![](https://veryimportantlot.com/cache/catalog/4363/NSLbJEENqSBWO3Re_NePL4jAtcdNtkvBzMPM8NqFVZhUuIN9lY7HJoFgZtrgfjIg_1717579597-172x196_center_100.jpg)
![](https://veryimportantlot.com/uploads/art_data/Artist/16642/Thomas Loraine McKenney.jpg)
Thomas Loraine McKenney was an American statesman and author.
After the abolition of the U.S. Indian trading program in 1822, then Secretary of War John C. Calhoun established a position in the War Department called Superintendent of Indian Affairs (later to become part of the Bureau of Indian Affairs). McKenney was the first appointed to this position and held it until 1830. Over the years, he worked tirelessly to promote Indian-American relations, advocating for the interests of Indians and striving to preserve the memory of their vanishing culture. Despite his interest in Native American history, McKenney sought to have them assimilated to Euro-American culture through Christian education.
McKenney commissioned leading artists, including Charles Byrd King, to paint portraits of Indian chiefs from more than twenty tribes who visited Washington on official business over a ten-year period. These portraits formed the basis of the government's National Portrait Gallery, first housed in the War Department and later transferred to the Smithsonian Institution. This gallery was featured in part in the three-volume History of the Indian Tribes of North America (1836-1844), with biographical sketches by McKenney, co-authored with Illinois lawyer and writer James Hall.
In 1865, a fire at the Smithsonian Institution destroyed all but a few of the portraits, which are now in the White House. Thus this three-volume book represents the only reliable source on the appearance of many of the most prominent leaders of Indian tribes.
![](https://veryimportantlot.com/uploads/art_data/Artist/16643/James Hall.png)
James Hall was an American lawyer, judge, treasurer, and editor.
Hall studied law, fought in the War of 1812, served as a lawyer and circuit judge, newspaper and magazine editor, Illinois state treasurer, and banker in Cincinnati, Ohio. In addition, he was also a historical and fiction writer. In 1828, Hall compiled the first western literary yearbook, Western Souvenir, and edited the Illinois Monthly Magazine. James Hall wrote a travel book, Letters from the West (1828), a novel, The Head of the Harp (1833), and several volumes of short stories.
Hall also contributed to the three-volume History of the Indian Tribes of North America (1836-1844). This book includes portraits of the chiefs of more than twenty Indian tribes, which were painted by noted artists of the day, with biographical sketches by Superintendent of Indian Affairs Thomas L. McKenney.
![](https://veryimportantlot.com/cache/catalog/4363/NSLbJEENqSBWO3Re_NePL4jAtcdNtkvBzMPM8NqFVZhUuIN9lY7HJoFgZtrgfjIg_1717579597-172x196_center_100.jpg)