Inspiration: “Hummingbird Perched on an Orchid Plant,” by Martin Johnson Heade

"Hummingbird Perched on an Orchid Plant," by Martin Johnson Heade.
“Hummingbird Perched on an Orchid Plant,” by Martin Johnson Heade.

Martin Johnson Heade was born (in 1819) and raised in Lumberville, Pennsylvania, a small hamlet along the Delaware River in Bucks County, Pennsylvania. Until the mid-1850s, his family ran what is now called the Lumberville Store and Post Office, the village’s sole general store. The family spelling of the name was Heed.

Heade received his first art training from the folk artist Edward Hicks, who lived in nearby Newtown, and possibly also from Edward’s cousin, Thomas Hicks. Heade was painting by 1839; his earliest known work is a portrait from that year. He traveled abroad and lived in Rome for two years. He first exhibited his work in 1841, at the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts in Philadelphia, and again in 1843 at the National Academy of Design in New York. Heade began exhibiting regularly in 1848, after another trip to Europe and became an itinerant artist until he settled in New York in 1859. Source: Wikipedia.