10
Portfolios%20%3D%20%221006%22%20and%20Disp_Obj_Type%20%3D%20%22Painting%22
Painting
Autumn Brook
George Bellows, 1882 - 1925
Bellows, George
United States
1882 - 1925
Male
16 1/2 x 24 in. (41.9 x 61 cm)
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approximate installation dimensions
frame
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without frame
Oil
Oil
October 1922
10/1922
10/1922
1900-2000, 20th century, landscapes, paintings, Realism
Painting
With his unflinching paintings of brutal boxing matches and urban tenements, George Bellows made a name for himself in the early years of the century as a central Urban Realist artist. In this later painting, "Autumn Brook," the modernist influence of expressive color, space and line is visible in Bellows’ lyrical painting of the countryside near his summer home in Woodstock, NY.
[Gallery label text, 2007]
"Autumn Brook" contains the archetypal elements present in Bellows's finest Woodstock landscapes, including water, rolling hills, mountains, animal life, vegetation, and a dramatic sky. Bellows's choice of vivid colors celebrates the magnificence of nature and the artist's joy at finding himself immersed in it. The active brush strokes prove his ability to paint with a controlled sense of abandon.
[Gallery label text]
lower left, centerverso
2001.27
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Memorial Art Gallery
1/31/2002
2001.27TR1
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Memorial Art Gallery
Imaging Complete
3/13/2002
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Painting
Evening Group
George Bellows, 1882 - 1925
Bellows, George
United States
1882 - 1925
Male
25 x 30 in. (63.5 x 76.2 cm)
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approximate installation dimensions
frame
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frame
Oil
Oil
1914
1914
1914
1900-2000, 20th century, Ashcan School and friends, leisure activities, paintings, Realism, seascapes
Painting
This painting portrays the artist with his wife, Emma, and daughter, Anne, on vacation on Monhegan Island off the coast of Maine. Two neighbor children occupy the right side of the canvas.
[Gallery label text, 2007]
In the summer of 1914, painter George Bellows convinced his wife, Emma, to travel to Monhegan Island off the coast of Maine along with their young daughter, Anne. There, he hoped to paint more of the stunning seascapes he had worked on so successfully in past years. Evening Group depicts Emma and Anne on the left, the artist in the middle, and two neighbor children on the right.
Based in New York City during much of the year, Bellows found that the harsh beauty of places like Monhegan Island provided him with subjects that contrasted dramatically with his acclaimed urban scenes. He first visited the island in 1911 in the company of his teacher and mentor, Robert Henri, and wrote enthusiastically to Emma: “The Island is only a mile wide and two miles long, but it looks as large as the Rocky Mountains. It’s three times as high as Montauk [Long Island] and all black and grey rock. Beautiful pine forests and wonderful varieties of all kinds…” In another letter, he lamented “my head is full of millions of great pictures which I will never have time to paint.”
[Gallery label text, 2005]
lower leftback of panel, Handwritten, capital letters, printed (not script) on back of panel.
1947.13
item
Memorial Art Gallery
9/8/1999
47.13TR1
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Memorial Art Gallery
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Memorial Art Gallery
Imaging complete
7/10/2000
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photo in Art & Deocration Magazine 8/1915
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Painting
Beach at Blue Point
William Glackens, 1870 - 1938
Glackens, William
United States
1870 - 1938
Male
25 1/4 x 30 1/8 in. (64.1 x 76.5 cm)
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approximate installation dimensions
frame
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Oil
Oil
ca. 1915
1910
1920
1900-2000, 20th century, Ashcan School and friends, leisure activities, paintings, seascapes
Painting
Like many American painters, including Winslow Homer, William Glackens was an artist-reporter early in his career. He met Robert Henri in Philadelphia, shared a studio with him, and went to Paris with him in 1895. Upon Glackens's return, he moved to New York City. He exhibited with The Eight in 1908, and chaired the Armory Show in 1913. By 1914, he was devoting all of his time to painting, and espoused subjects like this one, colorful depictions of Americans at play. Many of his paintings reflect the influence of French impressionists, particularly Pierre Auguste Renoir.
[Gallery label text, 2003]
lower right
1973.12
item
Memorial Art Gallery
9/8/1999
73.12TR1
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Memorial Art Gallery
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Memorial Art Gallery
Imaging complete
8/28/2000
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73.12DI#2
digital image
9/7/2012
http://127.0.0.1:5000/Media/images/73.12_A2.jpg
Painting
Tom Cafferty
Robert Henri, 1865 - 1929
Henri, Robert
United States
1865 - 1929
Male
22 1/4 x 20 1/8 in. (56.5 x 51.1 cm)
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approximate installation dimensions
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frame
Oil
Oil
1924
1924
1924
1900-2000, 20th century, children, paintings, portraits
Painting
Robert Henri, the leader of the Urban Realist movement, sought truth in art above all else. Henri promoted this revolutionary idea in support of a uniquely American art.
[Gallery label text, 2007]
In addition to providing guidance and inspiration (as well as occasional financial assistance) to many artists, Robert Henri was himself a very fine painter. Wherever he taught, he gathered around him eager and enthusiastic students who benefited from his instruction. He moved to New York in 1900 and taught at William Merritt Chase's school for a few years. In 1909, he established his own school, and also taught painting at the radical Ferrer School established by former Rochesterian Emma Goldman.
Although a member of the National Academy of Design, Henri actively promoted non-juried exhibitions and the work of younger, less traditional artists. Dictums such as "Know what the old masters did…They made their language. You make yours. All the past can help you" gave his followers the confidence to paint in their own way.
During the 1920s, Henri lived in Ireland and painted a young boy named Tom Cafferty, who was the subject of this painting and a number of others. Characteristically, Henri painted him in a very loose and colorful style, with energetic brush strokes.
[Gallery label text, 2003]
lower rightyes, verso
1926.1
item
Memorial Art Gallery
9/8/1999
26.1TR1
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Memorial Art Gallery
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Memorial Art Gallery
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7/10/2000
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Detail
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26.1DI#4
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6/22/2010
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Painting
Boy with Dice
Shoeshine Boy
George Luks, 1867 - 1933
Luks, George
United States
1867 - 1933
Male
30 5/16 x 26 5/16 in. (77 x 66.8 cm)
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approximate installation dimensions
frame
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without frame
Oil
Oil
ca. 1923-1924
1923
1924
5964
1900-2000, 20th century, children, paintings, portraits
Painting
This painting of a shoeshine boy is a part of a series Luks made of young boys who worked on the streets of New York.
[Gallery label text, 2007
Luks, like Glackens, was originally from Philadelphia and moved to New York City in 1896. He was one of The Eight who exhibited together at Macbeth Gallery in 1908, and his painting of a boy with dice reflects his interest in depicting aspects of life in the lower classes. Here, a boy who looks to be no more than ten is smoking, more than likely earning his own living as a shoeshine boy, and supplementing his income by gambling.
The painting, inscribed To Elizabeth, was given by the artist to his student, Elizabeth Olds, who studied with him at the Art Students League in New York City. Elizabeth Olds was an accomplished printmaker and, like her teacher, believed in the importance of art for all people, not just the upper classes.
[Gallery label text, 2003]
upper right
1974.103
item
Memorial Art Gallery
9/8/1999
74.103TR1
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Memorial Art Gallery
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Memorial Art Gallery
Imaging complete
7/14/2000
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Painting
London Bus Driver
Cabby or London Cabby
George Luks, 1867 - 1933
Luks, George
United States
1867 - 1933
Male
27 x 22 in. (68.6 x 55.9 cm)
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without frame
Oil
Oil
1889
1889
1889
1800-1900, 19th century, Ashcan School and friends, Encyclopedia Britannica Collection, men, paintings, portraits
Painting
Luks, like Glackens, was originally from Philadelphia and moved to New York City in 1896. He was one of The Eight who exhibited together at Macbeth Gallery in 1908, and his painting of a boy with dice reflects his interest in depicting aspects of life in the lower classes. Here, a boy who looks to be no more than ten is smoking, more than likely earning his own living as a shoeshine boy, and supplementing his income by gambling.
The painting, inscribed To Elizabeth, was given by the artist to his student, Elizabeth Olds, who studied with him at the Art Students League in New York City. Elizabeth Olds was an accomplished printmaker and, like her teacher, believed in the importance of art for all people, not just the upper classes.
[Gallery label text]
lower leftverso
1951.9
item
Memorial Art Gallery
9/8/1999
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Memorial Art Gallery
Imaging complete
7/13/2000
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51.9DI#3
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Detail
6/11/2009
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Painting
Sunday Morning
Jerome Myers, 1867 - 1940
Myers, Jerome
United States
1867 - 1940
Male
37 1/2 x 44 1/2 in. (95.3 x 113 cm)
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image
Oil
Oil
1907
1907
1907
1900-2000, 20th century, Ashcan School and friends, children, cityscapes, men, paintings, women
Painting
Jerome Myers said of his art, “I went to the gutter for my subject, but they were poetic gutters.”
[Gallery label text, 2007]
Jerome Myers was called "the gentle poet of the slums" for his compassionate images of immigrant life in New York's Lower East Side. Myers recorded the unglamorous, yet commonplace aspects of city life, as did fellow painters John Sloan and Robert Henri, members of The Eight or the Ashcan School. However, his vision of the city's poor never evoked a sense of wretchedness: "Why catch humanity by the shirt-tail," he said, "when I could see more pleasant things?"
Though tame to us today, paintings like Sunday Morning were considered progressive, even "revolutionary" when they were painted, because of their subject matter. However, when it came to exhibiting with The Eight, Robert Henri didn't think that Myers's work was forceful enough. As a founder of the innovative American Association of Painters and Sculptors in 1911, Myers helped to pave the way for the watershed 1913 Armory Show in New York City, the exhibition that introduced European modernism to an enthusiastic but occasionally bewildered public.
[Gallery label text, 2006]
lower left
1998.74
item
Memorial Art Gallery
10/21/1999
98.74TR1
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Memorial Art Gallery
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Memorial Art Gallery
Imaging complete
6/19/2001
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35myers1.tif
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98.74DI#2
digital image
Memorial Art Gallery
Imaging complete
1/19/2015
http://127.0.0.1:5000/Media/images/98.74_A2.jpg
Painting
Sullivan Street
Everett Shinn, 1876 - 1953
Shinn, Everett
United States
1876 - 1953
Male
8 x 10 in. (20.3 x 25.4 cm)
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approximate installation dimensions
frame
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without frame
Oil
Oil
1900-1905
1900
1905
1900-2000, 20th century, Ashcan School and friends, cityscapes, paintings, winter
Painting
In a city of many tough neighborhoods, New York’s Sullivan Street was one of the toughest. Shinn’s depiction of the isolated figure in the foreground evokes the condition of modern man in an urban environment—a recurring theme in the art of the Urban Realists.
[Gallery label text, 2007]
In 1897, encouraged by his mentor Robert Henri, Shinn moved from Philadelphia to New York City. Like Luks and Glackens, he was an artist-reporter as well as a painter. He exhibited with The Eight in 1908 at Macbeth Gallery. Sullivan Street was owned by the artist until 1945, when the Memorial Art Gallery purchased the canvas directly from him.
With just a few strokes of his brush, Everett Shinn has recreated an overcast winter street scene filled with mood and mystery. Sullivan Street is in Greenwich Village, around the corner from Shinn's studio on Waverly Place and near Washington Square Park, whose leafless trees can be seen beyond the buildings on the right.
[Gallery label text, 2003]
lower left
1945.45
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Memorial Art Gallery
9/8/1999
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Memorial Art Gallery
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8/3/2000
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Painting
Chinese Restaurant
John Sloan, 1871 - 1951
Sloan, John
United States
1871 - 1951
Male
26 x 32 1/4 in. (66 x 81.9 cm)
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overall framed size
horizontal
frame
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without frame
Oil
Oil
1909
1909
1909
1900-2000, 20th century, Ashcan School and friends, cats, Encyclopedia Britannica Collection, important MAG collections, paintings
Painting
John Sloan’s interest in the working class was not only aesthetic, it was also political. By 1909, Sloan was an active member of the Socialist party and used his art to shine a light on the equally noble and interesting lives of the lower classes. Marrying style to subject, Sloan’s loose brushwork and dark colors epitomize the Ashcan style.
[Gallery label text, 2007]
In 1909, many artists and collectors would not have considered a Chinese restaurant to be an appropriate subject for a painting. The artist, John Sloan, was part of a group of artists labeled “Ashcan” painters early in the century, because of their frequent choice of the less genteel aspects of urban life. Now, Sloan’s paintings are recognized as major documents of American life and this painting, like many others on view in this installation, is often loaned to museums in the United States and overseas.
Also called “The Eight,” Sloan and his seven colleagues exhibited together in a landmark show at Macbeth Gallery in 1908 in response to the jurying system of the National Academy and its more traditional members that frequently excluded less conventional artists.
It’s amusing to consider that in 1943, when the Encyclopedia Britannica collection was being assembled, that a painting created in 1909 would be considered contemporary. However, it may have been included in recognition of the fact that John Sloan painted his contemporary world as he saw it. In fact, in 1943, the freshness of Sloan’s style and the timeless nature of the scene painted thirty-four years previously did not seem out of keeping with many works from the 1940s. And Sloan was still quite an active artist at this point in his life.
[Gallery label text, 2006]
As recommended by his mentor, painter Robert Henri, John Sloan derived most of his subjects from close observation of his surroundings. Such was the case on the night of February 23, 1909, when he went out to eat at a restaurant on Sixth Avenue, not far from Herald Square. He wrote, “I saw a strikingly gotten up girl with dashing red feathers in her hat playing with the restaurant's fat cat. It would be a good thing to paint. I may make a go at it.” Characteristically, Sloan waited for a bit before undertaking the work, and on March 15 wrote, “I started a memory painting of the Chinese Restaurant girl I saw some four weeks ago." His intermittent working style is revealed by a diary entry on March, 18, in which he described not only working on the painting, but going to the restaurant again to “refresh my memory of the place.”
In 1944, the painting joined a corporate collection of outstanding contemporary art formed by the Encyclopedia Britannica. In 1951, the Memorial Art Gallery acquired fourteen paintings from the collection – this painting and work by Thomas Hart Benton, Georgia O'Keeffe, and Stuart Davis, among others.
[Gallery label text, 2003]
lower left
1951.12
item
Memorial Art Gallery
9/8/1999
51.12TR1
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Memorial Art Gallery
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Memorial Art Gallery
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6/1/2009
http://127.0.0.1:5000/Media/images/51.12_A2.jpg
Painting
Election Night
John Sloan, 1871 - 1951
Sloan, John
United States
1871 - 1951
Male
26 3/8 x 32 1/4 in. (67 x 81.9 cm)
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approximate installation dimensions
frame
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Oil
Oil
1907
1907
1907
1900-2000, 20th century, Ashcan School and friends, movement, paintings, politics in art
Painting
This scene, nearly unintelligible in its crowding and confusion, is Sloan’s celebration of the furor of the city on election night.
[Gallery label text, 2007]
John Sloan met Robert Henri in Philadelphia, and from early on maintained a friendship and correspondence with him until Henri died in 1929. He moved to New York City at Henri’s urging.
On November 5, 1907, he wrote: “Election Day… saw the noisy trumpet blowers, confetti throwers and the 'ticklers' in use - a small feather duster on a stick which is pushed in the face of each girl by the men, and in the face of men by the girls. A good humorous crowd, so dense in places that it was impossible to control one's movement.” The location, Herald Square at 34th and Broadway, was close by the New York Herald Building as well as Macy's. The elevated railroad tracks loomed overhead, increasing the suggestion of noise and activity in the scene.
Sloan included Election Night as one of his entries in the 1908 exhibition at Macbeth Gallery. In his estimation, it was “…one of my best things. So that I felt happy in the evening, that good all over feeling that only comes from satisfaction in work - the real happiness, the joy of accomplishing or thinking that one has accomplished, which amounts to the same thing.”
[Gallery label text, 2003]
lower left
1941.33
item
Memorial Art Gallery
9/8/1999
41.33TR1
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Memorial Art Gallery
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http://127.0.0.1:5000/Graphics/blank.gif
41.33SL2
slide
detail-central group
2 x 2
00/00/00
http://127.0.0.1:5000/Graphics/blank.gif
41.33SL1
slide
full
2 x 2
00/00/00
http://127.0.0.1:5000/Graphics/blank.gif
neg
4x5
00/00/00
http://127.0.0.1:5000/Graphics/blank.gif
glossy
8x10
00/00/00
http://127.0.0.1:5000/Graphics/blank.gif
neg
8x10
00/00/00
http://127.0.0.1:5000/Graphics/blank.gif
41.33DI1
digital image
Memorial Art Gallery
Imaging complete
7/10/2000
http://127.0.0.1:5000/Media/images/41.33_A1.jpg
41.33SL3
slide
detail- lady in red
2 x 2
00/00/00
http://127.0.0.1:5000/Graphics/blank.gif
41.33SL4
slide
detail-man with false nose
2 x 2
00/00/00
http://127.0.0.1:5000/Graphics/blank.gif
41.33SL5
slide
detail-streetlight
2 x 2
00/00/00
http://127.0.0.1:5000/Graphics/blank.gif
36sloan1.tif
digital image
00/00/00
http://127.0.0.1:5000/Media/images/SeeingAmerica/36sloan1.tif