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Portfolios%20%3D%20%22862%22%20and%20Creation_Place2%20%3D%20%22United%20States%22%20and%20Disp_Obj_Type%20%3D%20%22Painting%22
Painting
Afternoon Light
Ralph Albert Blakelock, 1847 - 1919
Blakelock, Ralph Albert
United States
1847 - 1919
Male
16 1/8 x 24 1/16 in. (41 x 61.1 cm)
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approximate installation dimensions
frame
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without frame
Oil
Oil
ca. 1880-1890
1880
1890
1800-1900, 19th century, landscapes, paintings, romanticism
Painting
This brooding, moody canvas was created by one of the most haunted souls in the history of American art. Ralph Blakelock, a man diagnosed as a paranoid schizophrenic and placed in a sanitarium for fifteen years, painted some of the most mysterious, expressive and poetic paintings in 19th century America. Indeed, his interest in and exploration of the unknown and the expressive were deeply admired by such radical 20th century abstract painters as Willem deKooning, Jackson Pollock and Franz Kline....
[Gallery label text]
lower rightcardboard backing of paintingverso, Visible before relining.
1974.4
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Memorial Art Gallery
9/8/1999
74.4TR1
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Memorial Art Gallery
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74.4DI1
digital image
Memorial Art Gallery
Imaging complete
7/13/2000
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74.4SL2
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detail of hands w print
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74.4 backing boardDI2
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Painting
The Artist's Studio in an Afternoon Fog
Winslow Homer, (Boston, MA, 1836 - 1910, Prout's Neck, ME)
Homer, Winslow
United States
1836 - 1910
Male
24 x 30 1/4 in. (61 x 76.8 cm)
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with frame
frame
Oil
Oil
1894
1894
1894
1800-1900, 19th century, paintings, seascapes, weather & water
Painting
In the course of his long and distinguished career, Winslow Homer shifted his focus from robust descriptions of American life to studies of interaction between man and the powerful forces of nature, particularly the ocean. This evocative painting of his studio at his family’s compound on the coast of Maine in Prout’s Neck, near Portland, is considered one of Homer’s most masterful works.
[Gallery label text, 2007]
A foggy day on the coastal peninsula of Prout's Neck, Maine, inspired Winslow Homer to paint one of his most elegant and contemplative works. His studio and family home stand silhouetted between the darker cliffs in the foreground and the paler sky. The painting's composition balances strong diagonal and horizontal elements in the lower half with a monolithic sky punctuated by a circle of sun.
Homer was known for his many paintings of rural America, as well as his illustrations of the Civil War. In 1883, Homer left New York City, where he had been living, and settled permanently in Prout's Neck. During his years there, he produced some of the most thrilling marine paintings in the history of American art.
[Gallery label text, 2006]
lower rightremoved, kept in file, Exhibition label for Panama-Pacific International Expositionremoved, kept in file
1941.32
item
Memorial Art Gallery
9/8/1999
41.32TR1
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Memorial Art Gallery
4 x 5
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Memorial Art Gallery
Imaging complete
6/23/2000
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Memorial Art Gallery
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6/23/2000
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http://127.0.0.1:5000/Media/images/SeeingAmerica/M425_p116.tif
digital image
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41.32DI#3
digital image
12/4/2013
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41.32DI#4
digital image
Memorial Art Gallery
Imaging complete
9/19/2019
http://127.0.0.1:5000/Media/images/41.32_A3.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
4 x 5
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41.33DI1
digital image
Memorial Art Gallery
Imaging complete
7/10/2000
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detail- lady in red
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detail-man with false nose
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