By Elizabeth Walztoni, LCN
Jamie Hanna has spent the past five years locating and documenting hundreds of artworks her father, David Hanna, created during her childhood in Bristol and earlier years in Pennsylvania. While following international clues to bring his work to the public, hoping to organize his first exhibition since 1981, she has connected to her father, his relationships, and her own early life on the peninsula.
David Hanna painted realist landscapes and portraits in watercolor and egg tempera using a drybrush technique. Self-taught, he studied artists of the Brandywine School, an American realist artistic tradition that included the Wyeth family.
Jamie Hanna, who attended Lincoln Academy, has spent her adult life across the country and now splits her time between Annapolis, Md. and Pemaquid.
She describes her father’s style as precise and unpretentious, holding a place in American art history.
“There was no preciousness to his process,” she said. “He had to do this.”
He painted to support his wife and seven children, often selling on commission, and when he died at age 39 most of his work was in private hands.