Description

By the latter half of the 19th century, American scene painters were beginning to free themselves from the “tyranny” of the European academic tradition. They painted distinctly American subjects: genre scenes of everyday life and our landscape in all its variety and glory, from Manhattan’s gritty streets to purple mountain majesties. We associate Winslow Homer, with Prout’s Neck, Maine but he also worked in the Adirondacks and vacation spots from Canada to the West Indies. Largely self-taught, Homer rejected the academic tradition to seek his own path to success. This art history lecture examines the milieu and works of Winslow Homer, painter in oils and watercolors of distinctly American subjects.