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・ Ernest Palmer (British cinematographer)
・ Ernest Palmer, 1st Baron Palmer
・ Ernest Papa Arko
・ Ernest Parkinson
・ Ernest Parsons
・ Ernest Partridge
・ Ernest Pascal
・ Ernest Pass Memorial Ground
・ Ernest Paul
・ Ernest Payne
・ Ernest Payne (footballer)
・ Ernest Peak
・ Ernest Peake
・ Ernest Pearce
・ Ernest Peirce
Ernest Peixotto
・ Ernest Perley
・ Ernest Perry
・ Ernest Perry (cricketer)
・ Ernest Perry (footballer)
・ Ernest Perry (politician)
・ Ernest Peter Burger
・ Ernest Peterlin
・ Ernest Peterly
・ Ernest Petin
・ Ernest Petrič
・ Ernest Petter
・ Ernest Phipps
・ Ernest Picard
・ Ernest Pickering


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Ernest Peixotto : ウィキペディア英語版
Ernest Peixotto

Ernest Clifford Peixotto (1869–1940) was an American artist, illustrator, and author. Although he was known mainly for his murals and his travel literature, his artwork also regularly appeared in ''Scribner's Magazine''. His 1916 work ''Our Hispanic Southwest'' is famous for including the first written appearance of the ethnic slur "spic" (although, in fact, it had previously appeared with a different spelling and pronunciation).
==Biography==
Born on October 15, 1869, in San Francisco, California, Peixotto was one of five children in a Sephardic Jewish family. He studied art at the Mark Hopkins Institute of Art with Emil Carlsen, who encouraged him to go to Paris. Taking his advice, Peixotto went to France in 1888 and studied at the Académie Julian under the tutelage of Jean-Joseph Benjamin-Constant, Henri Lucien Doucet and Jules Joseph Lefebvre.〔 While in France, he visited the colony of the American Impressionists and befriended Theodore Robinson. He spent a total of six years in France, returning to San Francisco in 1894. The following year, he moved to New York City, and joined the staff of ''Scribner's Magazine''.
In 1897, he married the painter Mary Glascock Hutchinson in New Orleans. Two years later the couple returned to France on a sketching trip for ''Scribner's'' and ended up staying for six years based in Fontainebleau, outside Paris. During this period, Peixotto illustrated Theodore Roosevelt's ''Life of Oliver Cromwell'' (1904). Although he frequently returned to the United States to work, the house in Fontainebleau served as his primary residence for the remainder of his life.〔
In the fall of 1907, he was teaching at the Art Institute of Chicago, where Thomas Hart Benton was his student. After having been elected to the National Academy of Design in 1909,〔(【引用サイトリンク】 title=National Academicians )〕 Peixotto's first large commissioned mural was ''Le Morte d'Arthur'' for a private library for railroader Henry A. Everett (not, as widely repeated, at the Cleveland Public Library) in 1911. Subsequently, the majority of his work was in mural form, most of it for private individuals.〔
During World War I, Peixotto served as a captain in the United States Army Corps of Engineers, director of the Section of Painting, and one of eight official artists attached to the American Expeditionary Force, whose job was to create a visual record of events. After the war, he remained in France as director of the United States Army's art-training center, which merged into the École des Beaux-Arts in 1923. Peixotto remained as the chair of the school's American Committee, while simultaneously serving as the director of the mural department of the Beaux-Arts Institute of Design in New York, a position he held from 1919 through 1926, when he left to focus on his own work.〔 In June 1921 he was made a ''Chevalier'' in the Légion d'honneur, for war work and the promotion of friendship between France and the United States.
However, he still served on a number of art organizations. He was the president of the National Society of Mural Painters from 1929–35〔http://nationalsocietyofmuralpainters.com〕
, and president of School Art League of New York from 1936–40. From 1935–40 he served on the Art Commission of New York City and was director of murals for the 1939 New York World's Fair.〔
Peixotto died on December 6, 1940.〔

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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