Franklin Brooke Voss
Biography
Franklin Brooke Voss was born in New York City in 1880.[4] He attended the Art Students League of New York, where George Bridgman was his teacher.[4]
He was commissioned paintings by the Whitneys, Riddles, Vanderbilts, Phippses, Wideners, and Willis Sharpe Kilmer.[1][2] He painted Man o' War, Equipoise, Seabiscuit, War Admiral, Sir Barton and Whirlaway.[1] Some of his work can be found at the Museum of Polo and Hall of Fame in Lake Worth, Florida.[5]
Bibliography
- Peter Winants, The Sporting Art of Franklin B. Voss (Eclipse Press, 2005)
gollark: https://towardsdatascience.com/the-statistics-of-the-improbable-cec9a754e0ff?gi=876869185907
gollark: Well, the god should clearly have kept doing that, since it worked better.
gollark: Why would a god choose to communicate in such a ridiculous way and not write "HI, GOD HERE" in giant letters of fire in the sky?
gollark: Again, random noise? There are a lot of places you can read out information and a lot of different things you can compare against.
gollark: Oh yes, light speed is annoying too. Also how even the planets are mostly really boring.
References
- National Museum of Racing exhibit
- Christie's
- "The British Sporting Art Trust". Archived from the original on 2016-03-04. Retrieved 2012-01-21.
- Chisholm Gallery
- Museum of Polo and Hall of Fame website, Introduction
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