JOSEPH LEE
1827-1880Joseph Lee was an English-born painter known for his meticulously detailed ship portraits and coastal scenes of 19th-century California. Born in England in 1827, he immigrated to San Francisco in 1858, where he was first listed in the city directory as a sign painter. Little is known of his artistic training, suggesting he may have been largely self-taught. That same year, he gained public recognition when he received a bronze medal for tin signs at the second Mechanics’ Institute Fair.
Transitioning from sign painting to fine art, Lee became admired for his highly precise marine paintings—works so exacting that, as contemporaries joked, “you could rig a ship from one of his paintings.” His compositions often featured water and repeating visual elements such as white picket fences or railroad tracks, revealing a methodical and decorative sensibility. Ship captains frequently commissioned him to paint their vessels, and he often signed his name on the bows of the ships he depicted.
Lee exhibited regularly in San Francisco during the 1870s, including at the Mechanics’ Institute Fairs and the San Francisco Art Association. His body of work is small—fewer than one hundred paintings are known to exist—but his surviving examples remain prized for their craftsmanship and historical value.
He died in San Francisco on January 13, 1880, from a lung disease.

