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Winslow Homer (February 24, 1836 – September 29, 1910) was an American landscape painter and printmaker, best known for his marine subjects. He is considered one of the foremost painters in 19th century America and a preeminent figure in American art.

Winslow Homer


Paintings

Prisoners from the Front

Moonlight, Wood Island Light

Camp Fire

Rainy Day in Camp

Dressing for the Carnival

Eagle Head, Manchester, Massachusetts (High Tide)

Snap the Whip

The Veteran in a New Field

A Quiet Pool on a Sunny Day

A Sloop at a Wharf, Gloucester

An Adirondack Lake

Autumn Mountainville, New York

Charles Savage Homer jr.

Black Bass, Florida

Boy in a Boatyard aka Boy with Barrels

Boys and Kitten

Boys Fishing, Gloucester Harbor

Boys in a Dory

Boys in a Dory

Boys in a Pasture

By the Shore

Canoe in the Rapids

Channel Bass

Children on the Beach

Contraband

Crab Fishing

Dad's Coming!

Daughter of the Coast Guard

Daughters of the Sea

Early Evening aka Sailors Take Warning

Early Morning After a Storm at Sea

East Hampton Long Island

Eight Bells

Fallen Deer

Fishergirls on Shore Tynemouth

Fisherman's Family aka The Lookout

Fisherwives

Fishing Boats Key West

Fishing in the Adirondacks

Fishing the Rapids Saguenay

For the Farmer's Boy old English Song

Fresh Air

Fresh Eggs

Girl and Daisies

Girl in a Hammock

Girl in the Orchard

Girl Seated

Girl with a Hay Rake

Girls with Lobster aka A Fisherman's Daughter

Glass Windows Bahamas

Gloucester Harbor

Gloucester Harbor and Dory

Hark! The Lark!

Harrowing

High Cliff Coast of Maine

Home Sweet Home

Homosassa River

Hound and Hunter

Houses on a Hill

In a Florida Jungle

In Charge of Baby

Kissing the Moon

Light on the Sea

Long Branch New Jersey

Looking out to Sea

Looking over the Cliff

Man in a Punt Fishing

Mending the Nets

Moonlight

Morning Glories

On Guard

On the Cliff

On the Hill

On the Way to the Bahamas

Tree Nassau aka Orange Trees and Gate

Osprey's Nest

Peach Blossoms

Peach Blossoms

Playing Him aka The North Woods

Portrait of a Lady

Portrait of Helena de Kay

Promenade on the Beach

Quananiche Lake St. John

Rest

Returning Fishing Boats

Rocky Coast and Gulls

Rowboat

Rowing at Prout's Neck

Rum Cay

Sailing the Catboat

Salt Kettle Bermuda

Shepherdess Tending Sheep

Shipbuilding at Gloucester

Shooting The Rapids

Sponge Fishing Nassau

Sunlight and Shadow

The Angler

The Berry Pickers

The Blue Boat

The Boatsman

The Brierwood Pipe

The Busy Bee

The Butterfly Girl

The Coral Divers

The Cotton Pickers

The Farmyard Wall

The Fountains at Night World's Columbian Exposition

The Gale

The Green Hill aka On the Hill

The Herring Net

The Houses of Parliament

The Last Furrow

The Life Line

The Lookout -All's Well

The Milk Maid

The New Novel aka Book

The Northeaster

The Pumpkin Patch

The Reaper

The Red Canoe

The Return of the Gleaner

The Sick Chicken

The Signal of Distress

The Sponge Diver

The Trysting Place

The Turtle Pond

The Two Guides

The West Wind

The Whittling Boy

The Woodcutter

The Wreck

Three Boys in a Dory with Lobster Pots

To the Rescue

Two Men in a Canoe

Under a Palm Tree

Undertow

Waiting for the Boats

Watching the Tempest

Weaning the Calf

West Point Prout's Neck

Where are the Boats aka On the Cliffs

How Many Eggs

The Fog Horn

The Last Furrow

The Lobster Pot

The Red Canoe

Uncle Ned at Home

Woodchopper in the Adirondacks

Croquet

Double hit

Breezing Up. A Fair Wind

The Gulf Stream

After the Tornado

Fog warning


Drawings

A Basket of Clams

Boys in a Dory

Sheep

Inside the Bar

Two Ladies


The herring network


Arrival of the last boat


Study


Zouave

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Largely self-taught, Homer began his career working as a commercial illustrator.[1] He subsequently took up oil painting and produced major studio works characterized by the weight and density he exploited from the medium. He also worked extensively in watercolor, creating a fluid and prolific oeuvre, primarily chronicling his working vacations.[2][3]

Early life
The Bathers, wood engraving, Harper's Weekly, 1873

Born in Boston, Massachusetts in 1836, Homer was the second of three sons of Charles Savage Homer and Henrietta Benson Homer, both from long lines of New Englanders. His mother was a gifted amateur watercolorist and Homer’s first teacher, and she and her son had a close relationship throughout their lives. Homer took on many of her traits, including her quiet, strong-willed, terse, sociable nature; her dry sense of humor; and her artistic talent.[4] Homer had a happy childhood, growing up mostly in then rural Cambridge, Massachusetts. He was an average student, but his art talent was evident in his early years.

Homer’s father was a volatile, restless businessman who was always looking to “make a killing”. When Homer was thirteen, Charles gave up the hardware store business to seek a fortune in the California gold rush. When that failed, Charles left his family and went to Europe to raise capital for other get-rich-quick schemes that didn’t materialize.[5]

After Homer’s high school graduation, his father saw an ad in the newspaper and arranged for an apprenticeship. Homer’s apprenticeship to a Boston commercial lithographer at the age of 19, was a formative but “treadmill experience”.[6] He worked repetitively on sheet music covers and other commercial work for two years. By 1857, his freelance career was underway after he turned down an offer to join the staff of Harper's Weekly. “From the time I took my nose off that lithographic stone”, Homer later stated, “I have had no master, and never shall have any.” [7]

Homer’s career as an illustrator lasted nearly twenty years. He contributed to magazines such as Ballou's Pictorial and Harper's Weekly, at a time when the market for illustrations was growing rapidly, and when fads and fashions were changing quickly. His early works, mostly commercial engravings of urban and country social scenes, are characterized by clean outlines, simplified forms, dramatic contrast of light and dark, and lively figure groupings — qualities that remained important throughout his career.[8] His quick success was mostly due to this strong understanding of graphic design and also to the adaptability of his designs to wood engraving.


Homer's studio

In 1859, he opened a studio in the Tenth Street Studio Building in New York City, the artistic and publishing capital of the United States. Until 1863 he attended classes at the National Academy of Design, and studied briefly with Frédéric Rondel, who taught him the basics of painting.[10] In only about a year of self-training, Homer was producing excellent oil work. His mother tried to raise family funds to send him to Europe for further study but instead Harper's sent Homer to the front lines of the American Civil War (1861–1865), where he sketched battle scenes and camp life, the quiet moments as well as the murderous ones.[11] His initial sketches were of the camp, commanders, and army of the famous Union officer, Major General George B. McClellan, at the banks of the Potomac River in October, 1861.
Thanksgiving in Camp, wood engraving, Harper's Weekly, 1862
Two Are Company, Three Are None, wood engraving, Harper's Weekly, 1872

Although the drawings did not get much attention at the time, they mark Homer's expanding skills from illustrator to painter. Like with his urban scenes, Homer also illustrated women during war time, and showed the effects of the war on the home front. The war work was dangerous and exhausting. Back at his studio, however, Homer would regain his strength and re-focus his artistic vision. He set to work on a series of war-related paintings based on his sketches, among them Sharpshooter on Picket Duty (1862), Home, Sweet Home (1863), and Prisoners from the Front (1866).[12] He exhibited Home, Sweet Home at the National Academy and its remarkable critical reception resulted in its quick sale and in the artist being elected an Associate Academician, then a full Academician in 1865.[10] After the war, Homer turned his attention primarily to scenes of childhood and young women, reflecting nostalgia for simpler times, both his own and the nation as a whole. His Crossing the Pasture (1871–1872) depicts two boys who idealize brotherhood with the hope of a united future after the war that pitted brother against brother.[13]


At nearly the beginning of his painting career, the twenty-seven year old Homer demonstrated a maturity of feeling, depth of perception, and mastery of technique which was immediately recognized. His realism was objective, true to nature, and emotionally controlled. One critic wrote, “Winslow Homer is one of those few young artists who make a decided impression of their power with their very first contributions to the Academy...He at this moment wields a better pencil, models better, colors better, than many whom, were it not improper, we could mention as regular contributors to the Academy.” And of Home, Sweet Home specifically, “There is no clap-trap about it. The delicacy and strength of emotion which reign throughout this little picture are not surpassed in the whole exhibition.” “It is a work of real feeling, soldiers in camp listening to the evening band, and thinking of the wives and darlings far away. There is no strained effect in it, no sentimentality, but a hearty, homely actuality, broadly, freely, and simply worked out.” [12]

Early landscapes and watercolors
Artists Sketching in the White Mountains, 1868, oil on panel (Portland Museum of Art, Portland, Maine)[14]

After exhibiting at the National Academy of Design, Homer finally traveled to Paris, France in 1867 where he remained for a year. His most praised early painting, Prisoners from the Front, was on exhibit at the Exposition Universelle in Paris at the same time.[12] He did not study formally but he practiced landscape painting while continuing to work for Harper's, depicting scenes of Parisian life.

Homer painted about a dozen small paintings during the stay. Although he arrived in France at a time of new fashions in art, Homer's main subject for his paintings was peasant life, showing more of an alignment with the established French Barbizon school and the artist Millet than with newer artists Manet and Courbet. Though his interest in depicting natural light parallels that of the early impressionists, there is no evidence of direct influence as he was already a plein-air painter in America and had already evolved a personal style which was much closer to Manet than Monet. Unfortunately, Homer was very private about his personal life and his methods (even denying his first biographer any personal information or commentary), but his stance was clearly one of independence of style and a devotion to American subjects. As his fellow artist Eugene Benson wrote, Homer believed that artists “should never look at pictures” but should “stutter in a language of their own.” [15]

Throughout the 1870s Homer continued painting mostly rural or idyllic scenes of farm life, children playing, and young adults courting, including Country School (1871) and The Morning Bell (1872). In 1875, Homer quit working as a commercial illustrator and vowed to survive on his paintings and watercolors alone. Despite his excellent critical reputation, his finances continued to remain precarious.[16] His popular 1872 painting, Snap-the-Whip, was exhibited at the 1876 Centennial Exposition in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, as was one of his finest and most famous paintings Breezing Up (1876). Of his work at this time, Henry James wrote:
Breezing Up (A Fair Wind),
1873–76, oil on canvas
(National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C.)[17]

"We frankly confess that we detest his subjects...he has chosen the least pictorial range of scenery and civilization; he has resolutely treated them as if they were pictorial...and, to reward his audacity, he has incontestably succeeded." [18]

Many disagreed with James. Breezing Up, Homer’s iconic painting of a father and three boys out for a spirited sail, received wide praise. The New York Tribune wrote, “There is no picture in this exhibition, nor can we remember when there has been a picture in any exhibition, that can be named alongside this.” Visits to Petersburg, Virginia around 1876 resulted in paintings of rural African American life. The same straightforward sensibility which allowed Homer to distill art from these potentially sentimental subjects also yielded the most unaffected views of African American life at the time, as illustrated in Dressing for the Carnival (1877) and A Visit from the Old Mistress (1876).[19]

In 1877, Homer exhibited for the first time at the Boston Art Club with the oil painting, An Afternoon Sun, (owned by the Artist). From 1877 through 1909 Homer exhibited often at the Boston Art Club. Works on paper, both drawings and watercolors, were frequently exhibited by Homer beginning in 1882. A most unusual sculpture by the Artist, Hunter with Dog - Northwoods, was exhibited in 1902. By that year Homer had switched his primary Gallery from the Boston based Doll and Richards to the New York City based Knoedler & Co.

Homer became a member of The Tile Club, a group of artists and writers who met frequently to exchange ideas and organize outings for painting, as well as foster the creation of decorative tiles. For a short time, he designed tiles for fireplaces.[20] Homer's nickname in The Tile Club was "The Obtuse Bard". Other well known Tilers were painters William Merritt Chase, Arthur Quartley, and the sculptor Augustus Saint Gaudens.
Cloud Shadows, 1890, oil on canvas (Spencer Museum of Art, University of Kansas, Lawrence)[21]

Homer started painting with watercolors on a regular basis in 1873 during a summer stay in Gloucester, Massachusetts. From the beginning, his technique was natural, fluid and confident, demonstrating his innate talent for a difficult medium. His impact would be revolutionary. Here, again, the critics were puzzled at first, "A child with an ink bottle could not have done worse."[22] Another critic said that Homer “made a sudden and desperate plunge into water color painting”. But his watercolors proved popular and enduring, and sold more readily, improving his financial condition considerably. They varied from highly detailed (Blackboard – 1877) to broadly impressionistic (Schooner at Sunset – 1880). Some watercolors were made as preparatory sketches for oil paintings (as for “Breezing Up”) and some as finished works in themselves. Thereafter, he seldom traveled without paper, brushes and water based paints.[23]

As a result of disappointments with women or from some other emotional turmoil, Homer became reclusive in the late 1870s, no longer enjoying urban social life and living instead in Gloucester. For a while, he even lived in secluded Eastern Point Lighthouse (with the keeper’s family). In re-establishing his love of the sea, Homer found a rich source of themes while closely observing the fishermen, the sea, and the marine weather. After 1880, he rarely featured genteel women at leisure, focusing instead on working women.[24]
[edit] England
Fisherwomen, Cullercoats, graphite and watercolor on paper 1881, Honolulu Academy of Arts

Homer spent two years (1881 – 1882) in the English coastal village of Cullercoats, Tyne and Wear. Many of the paintings at Cullercoats took as their subjects working men and women and their daily heroism, imbued with a solidity and sobriety which was new to Homer's art, presaging the direction of his future work. He wrote, “The women are the working bees. Stout hardy creatures.” [25] His palette became constrained and sober; his paintings larger, more ambitious, and more deliberately conceived and executed. His subjects more universal and less nationalistic, more heroic by virtue of his unsentimental rendering. Although he moved away from the spontaneity and bright innocence of the American paintings of the 1860s and 1870s, Homer found a new style and vision which carried his talent into new realms.[26]

Maine and maturity
Sunlight on the Coast, 1890
(Toledo Museum of Art, Ohio)[27]

Back in the U.S. in November 1882, Homer showed his English watercolors in New York. Critics noticed the change in style at once, “He is a very different Homer from the one we knew in days gone by”, now his pictures “touch a far higher plane...They are works of High Art.” [28] Homer’s women were no longer “dolls who flaunt their millinery” but “sturdy, fearless, fit wives and mothers of men” who are fully capable of enduring the forces and vagaries of nature along side their men.[29]

In 1883, Homer moved to Prouts Neck, Maine (in Scarborough) and lived at his family’s estate in the remodeled carriage house just seventy-five feet from the ocean.[30] During the rest of the mid-1880s, Homer painted his monumental sea scenes. In Undertow (1886), depicting the dramatic rescue of two female bathers by two male lifeguards, Homer’s figures “have the weight and authority of classical figures”.[31] In Eight Bells (1886), two sailors carefully take their bearings on deck, calmly appraising their position and by extension, their relationship with the sea; they are confident in their seamanship but respectful of the forces before them. Other notable paintings among these dramatic struggle-with-nature images are Banks Fisherman, The Gulf Stream, Rum Cay, Mending the Nets, and Searchlight, Harbor Entrance, Santiago de Cuba. Some of these he repeated as etchings.[32]

At fifty years of age, Homer had become a “Yankee Robinson Crusoe, cloistered on his art island” and “a hermit with a brush”. These paintings established Homer, as the New York Evening Post wrote, “in a place by himself as the most original and one of the strongest of American painters.” [30] But despite his critical recognition, Homer’s work never achieved the popularity of traditional Salon pictures or of the flattering portraits by John Singer Sargent. Many of the sea pictures took years to sell and Undertow only earned him $400.[33]

In these years, Homer received emotional sustenance primarily from his mother, brother Charles, and sister-in-law Martha (“Mattie”). After his mother’s death, Homer became a “parent” for his aging but domineering father and Mattie became his closest female intimate.[34] In the winters of 1884-5, Homer ventured to warmer locations in Florida, Cuba, and the Bahamas, and did a series of watercolors as part of a commission for Century Magazine. He replaced the turbulent green storm-tossed sea of Prouts Neck with the sparkling blue skies of the Caribbean, and the hardy New Englanders with the leisurely Black natives, further expanding his watercolor technique, subject matter, and palette.[35] His tropical stays inspired and refreshed him in much the same way as Paul Gauguin’s trips to Tahiti.[36]A Garden in Nassau (1885) is one of the best examples of these watercolors. Once again, his freshness and originality were praised by critics, but proved too advanced for the traditional art buyers and he “looked in vain for profits.” Homer lived frugally, however, and fortunately, his affluent brother Charles provided financial help when needed.[37]
The Fox Hunt, 1893. Oil on canvas, 96.5 x 174 cm. Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts.

Additionally, Homer found inspiration in a number of summer trips to the North Woods Club, near the hamlet of Minerva, New York in the Adirondack Mountains. It was on these fishing vacations that he experimented freely with the watercolor medium, producing works of the utmost vigor and subtlety, hymns to solitude, nature, and to outdoor life. Homer doesn’t shrink from the savagery of blood sports nor the struggle for survival. The color effects are boldly and facilely applied. In terms of quality and invention, Homer's achievements as a watercolorist are unparalleled: "Homer had used his singular vision and manner of painting to create a body of work that has not been matched." [38]

In 1893, Homer painted one of his most famous “Darwinian” works, The Fox Hunt, which depicts a flock of starving crows descending on a fox slowed by deep snow. This was Homer’s largest painting and it was immediately purchased by the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, his first painting in a major American museum collection.[39] In Huntsman and Dogs (1891), a lone, impassive hunter, with his yelping dogs at his side, heads home after a hunt, with deer skins slung over his right shoulder. Another late work, The Gulf Stream (1899), shows a Black sailor adrift in a damaged boat, surrounded by sharks and an impending maelstrom.[40]
The Gulf Stream, 1899, oil on canvas, Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York City

By 1900, Homer finally reached financial stability, as his paintings fetched good prices from museums and he began to receive rents from real estate properties. He also became free of the responsibilities of caring for his father who had died two years earlier.[41] Homer continued producing excellent watercolors, mostly on trips to Canada and the Caribbean. Other late works include sporting scenes such as Right and Left, as well as seascapes absent of human figures, mostly of waves crashing against rocks in varying light. In his last decade, he at times followed the advice he gave a student artist in 1907, “Leave rocks for your old age—they’re easy”.[42]

Homer died in 1910 at the age of 74 in his Prouts Neck studio and was interred in the Mount Auburn Cemetery in Cambridge, Massachusetts. His painting, Shooting the Rapids, Saguenay River, remains unfinished.

His Prouts Neck studio is now owned by the Portland Museum of Art.[43]

Influence


Homer never taught in a school or privately, as did Thomas Eakins, but his works strongly influenced succeeding generations of American painters for their direct and energetic interpretation of man's stoic relationship to an often neutral and sometimes harsh wilderness.[44] Robert Henri called Homer's work an "integrity of nature."[45]

American illustrator and teacher Howard Pyle revered Homer and encouraged his students to study him. His student and fellow illustrator, N. C. Wyeth (and through him Andrew Wyeth and Jamie Wyeth), shared the influence and appreciation, even following Homer to Maine for inspiration.[46] The elder Wyeth’s respect for his antecedent was “intense and absolute,” and can be observed in his early work Mowing (1907).[47] Perhaps Homer's austere individualism is best captured in his admonition to artists:

"Look at nature, work independently, and solve your own problems."


Homer honored on US Postage
Winslow Homer commemorative issue of 1962

In 1962 the U.S. Post Office released a commemorative stamp honoring Winslow Homer. Homer's famous oil painting "Breezing Up", now hanging in the National Gallery in Washington DC, was chosen as the image for the design of this issue.[48] On August 12, 2010, The Postal Service issued, in Richmond, Virgina, at the APS Stamp Show, a 44-cent commemorative stamp featuring Homer's "Boys in a Pasture". This stamp was the ninth to be issued in a series entitled "American Treasures". The original painting is part of the Hayden Collection at the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston.[49]


References

1. ^ Poole, Robert M. Hidden Depths. Smithsonian Magazine. April 2008. Retrieved 22 May 2008.
2. ^ Cooper, Helen A., Winslow Homer Watercolors, p. 16. Yale University Press, 1986.
3. ^ Hoeber, Arthur (February 1911). "Winslow Homer, A Painter Of The Sea". The World's Work: A History of Our Time XXI: 14009–14017.
4. ^ Cooper, p. 16.
5. ^ Elizabeth Johns, Winslow Homer: The Nature of Observation, University of California Press, Berkeley, 2002, p. 9, ISBN 0-520-22725-5.
6. ^ Nicolai Cikovsky, Jr., Winslow Homer, Harry N. Abrams, New York, 1990, pp. 11-13, ISBN 0-8109-1193-0
7. ^ Johns (2002), p. 13.
8. ^ Cikovsky (1990), p. 12
9. ^ After the Hurricane at The Art Institute of Chicago
10. ^ a b Cooper, p. 13.
11. ^ Cikovsky (1990), p. 15.
12. ^ a b c Cikovsky (1990), p. 16.
13. ^ Exhibit at the Amon Carter Museum in Fort Worth, Texas
14. ^ Artists Sketching the White Mountains at the Portland Museum of Art, Maine
15. ^ Cikovsky (1990), p. 32, 42.
16. ^ Johns (2002), p. 84.
17. ^ Breezing Up at the National Gallery of Art
18. ^ Quoted by Updike, John: "Epic Homer", Still Looking: Essays on American Art, p. 58. Alfred A. Knopf, 2005.
19. ^ Updike, John, page 69, 2005. "Among his feats may be listed the best, least caricatural portraits of postbellum African Americans,"
20. ^ Cikovsky (1990), p. 65.
21. ^ Cloud Shadows at the Spencer Museum of Art, University of Kansas
22. ^ Rough Notes on the Exhibition of the American Water Color Society for 1881, "Andrews' American Queen", page 110. February 12, 1881.
23. ^ Cikovsky (1990), p. 57.
24. ^ Cikovsky (1990), p. 72.
25. ^ Johns (2002), p. 98.
26. ^ Cikovsky (1990), pp. 75-79.
27. ^ Sunlight on the Coast at the Toledo Museum of Art, Ohio
28. ^ Cikovsky (1990), p. 81.
29. ^ Johns (2002), p. 105.
30. ^ a b Cikovsky (1990), p. 91.
31. ^ Cikovsky (1990), p. 84.
32. ^ Cikovsky (1990), p. 94.
33. ^ Johns (2002), p. 122.
34. ^ Johns (2002), p. 114.
35. ^ Johns (2002), p. 124.
36. ^ Cikovsky (1990), p. 100.
37. ^ Johns (2002), pp. 127-128.
38. ^ Walsh, Judith: "Innovation in Homer's Late Watercolors", Winslow Homer, page 283. National Gallery of Art, 1995.
39. ^ Cikovsky (1990), p. 115.
40. ^ Cikovsky (1990), p. 120.
41. ^ Johns (2002), pp. 127-150.
42. ^ Cikovsky (1990), p. 131.
43. ^ Portland Museum
44. ^ See Lost on the Grand Banks, collection of Bill Gates
45. ^ Robert Henri, The Art Spirit, Harper Collins, 1984
46. ^ An American Vision: Three Generations of Wyeth Art, New York Graphic Society, 1987, p. 68, ISBN 0-8212-1652-X.
47. ^ Wyeth (1987), p. 38.
48. ^ Scott's United States stamp catalogue
49. ^ https://shop.usps.com/webapp/wcs/stores/servlet/ProductDisplay?catalogId=10001&storeId=10052&productId=10006988&langId=-1


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