William B. Van Ingen
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William B. Van Ingen (1858-1955) was a stained glass artist and painter perhaps best known for his Panama Canal murals.
Born in Philadelphia, Van Ingen eventually moved to New York City where he apprenticed under noted stained glass artists John La Farge, Francis Lathrop, and Lewis C. Tiffany. Van Ingen was also known for his abilities in mural painting, particularly for the work he did for the Library of Congress in Washington, D.C., the U.S. Mint in Philadelphia, and the Panama Canal Authority.
The Panama Canal mural was executed on nearly 1000 square feet of canvas and depicts the excavation of the canal. They are mounted in the Panama Canal Administration Building in Panama. Van Ingen agreed to produce the murals at $25 per square foot. The paintings are apparently the largest group of murals by an American artist on display outside the United States[citation needed].
Of the murals, Van Ingen said, "I tried to compose into one picture the views to be seen from different standpoints, but united in the mind. It enabled me to combine different periods of time in the construction work." He also said, "[a]ny success the paintings may have had, came, I believe, from an endeavor to see with the eyes of the man in the ditch."
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Categories: Orphaned articles from October 2006 | All orphaned articles | Articles with unsourced statements since February 2007 | All articles with unsourced statements | 1858 births | 1955 deaths | American artists | American painters | Muralists | People from New York City | People from Philadelphia