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essay. If you have questions or comments regarding the source material,
please contact the San Diego Museum of Art directly through either this
phone number or web address:
Winslow Homer-American
Illustrator
June 3 - September 3, 2006
The San Diego Museum
of Art is presenting for the very first time its collection of 55 wood engravings
by Winslow Homer (1836-1910), who is widely regarded as one of America's
keenest observers of daily life. As part of its 80th Anniversary celebration,
Winslow Homer-American Illustrator will be on view from June 3 to September
3, 2006.
All of the wood engravings presented in the exhibition
were gifts made to the San Diego Museum of Art in 2001 through the bequest
of Myra Gentner. This representative survey-Homer created 220 total illustrations
during his lifetime-spans Homer's career, beginning with Husking the Corn
in New England, which was published in the newly emerging popular magazine
Harper's Weekly in November 1858. It concludes with Camping Out in the Adirondack
Mountains, one of his final illustrations, which appeared in Harper's in
November 1874.
The San Diego Museum of Art's collection includes some
of Homer's most enduring images, including The Army of the Potomac-A
Sharpshooter on Picket Duty (1862), Homeward Bound (1867), The
Summit of Mount Washington (1869), and Snap-the-Whip (1873).
The engravings on display represent many of the finest works Homer produced
in the print medium. Many of the subjects were also explored in oil or watercolor
and rank among the iconic images associated with Winslow Homer.
Homer's first illustration appeared on June 13, 1857, in
Ballou's Pictorial, a Boston periodical that provided a pictorial
record of the picturesque sites and events in his hometown. Later that summer,
the newly established Harper's Weekly of New York commissioned five images
from Homer to appear in their August 1 issue. In the fall of 1859, about
the time that Ballou's was ceasing its publication, Homer moved to
New York where he freelanced for Harper's for the next sixteen years.
Although he is counted high on the list of preeminent painters
working in the United States during the last half of the 19th century, Winslow
Homer spent the first eight years of his professional career, beginning
at age 19, working as a graphic artist. His first commissions were for drawings
to be transformed into illustrations for the popular magazines that were
emerging during this period. Over the years he created many lasting images
that encapsulated American life at the end of the 19th century.
Following is an article by D. Scott Atkinson, Chief
Curator & Curator of American Art, published in the Museum's members
magazine:
- Winslow Homer-American Illustrator will present for the first time at SDMA 55 wood engravings from
the Museum's collection that were produced after drawings by one of America's
keenest observers of daily life, Winslow Homer (1836-1910). This representative
survey-Homer created 220 total illustrations during his lifetime-begins
with Husking the Corn in New England, published in the popular magazine
Harper's Weekly in November 1858, and concludes with Camping
Out in the Adirondack Mountains, one of his final illustrations, appearing
in Harper's in November 1874.
-
- SDMA's collection includes some of Homer's most enduring
images, representing many of the finest works Homer produced in the print
medium. The Army of the Potomac-A Sharpshooter on Picket Duty (1862),
Homeward Bound (1867), The Summit of Mount Washington (1869),
and Snap-the-Whip (1873) are of particular note. Many of these subjects
were also explored in oil or watercolor and rank among the iconic images
we associate with Winslow Homer.
-
- Although he is counted high on the list of preeminent
painters working in the United States during the last half of the 19th
century, Winslow Homer actually spent the first eight years of his professional
career, beginning at age 19, working as a graphic artist. Homer's first
commissions were for drawings to be transformed into illustrations for
the newly emerging popular magazines of the period. Before the invention
of photo-mechanical printing processes, illustrations were reproduced in
magazines and books as wood-engravings. This process required Homer to
draw directly on a prepared boxwood surface before an engraver cut away
the wood leaving only his drawn lines.
-
- Homer's first illustration appeared June 13, 1857, in
Ballou's Pictorial, a Boston periodical that provided a pictorial
record of the picturesque sites and events in his hometown. Later that
summer, the newly established Harper's Weekly of New York commissioned
five images from Homer to appear in their August 1 issue. In the fall of
1859, about the time that Ballou's was ceasing its publication,
Homer moved to New York where he freelanced for Harper's for the
next sixteen years.
-
- All of the wood engravings presented in Winslow Homer-American
Illustrator were gifts made to SDMA in 2001 through the bequest of
Myra Gentner. It is with great pride that the Museum features these fine
works from this noteworthy collection as part of its 80th anniversary celebration.
-
-
- D. Scott Atkinson
-
- Chief Curator & Curator of American Art

(above: Winslow Homer, The Army of the Potomac
A Sharpshooter on Picket Duty,Harper's Weekly, November 15, 1862, Volume
VII, page 724. Wood engraving. © San Diego Museum of Art. Bequest of
Myra Gentner, 2001:72.)

(above: Winslow Homer, "Snap-the-Whip",Harper's
Weekly, September 20, 1873, Volume XVII, pages 824-825. Wood engraving.
© San Diego Museum of Art. Bequest of Myra Gentner, 2001:105.)
Editor's note: RL readers may also enjoy these earlier articles
and essays:
- Winslow Homer in the National Gallery of Art (7/14/05)
- Winslow Homer: Survival and the Sea (6/21/05)
- Winslow Homer: Making Art, Making History
(6/2/05)
- Winslow Homer the Illustrator: His Wood
Engravings, 1857-1888 (1/22/05)
- Winslow Homer and the Great Forest; essay
by David Tatham (7/20/04)
- Winslow Homer: Masterworks from the Adirondacks
(7/9/04)
- Winslow Homer - The Illustrator: His Wood
Engravings 1857-1888 (11/18/03, rev. 12/19/03)
- "The American Spirit: Frederic Church,
Winslow Homer, Thomas Moran" and "Leelanau: Michigan's Eden"
(8/26/03)
- Winslow Homer The Illustrator: His Wood
Engravings, 1857-1888 from the Cornell Fine Arts Museum, Winter Park, Florida
(8/11/03)
- Winslow Homer the Illustrator: His Wood
Engravings, 1857-1888 (12/9/02)
- Americans Outdoors: Seasonal Prints by
Winslow Homer (with selected wall text) (7/5/01)
- Rab and the Girls: A Riddle in Paint, by
Sarah Burns (5/31/01)
- Winslow Homer: The Civil War Years and
Winslow Homer: The Gloucester Years (12/4/00)
- Winslow Homer: An American Genius at the
Parthenon (7/25/00) including an image of Rab and the Girls
- Winslow Homer Watercolors at Canajoharie
Library and Art Gallery (2/24/01)
- Winslow Homer: The Civil War Years and
Winslow Homer: The Gloucester Years (12/4/00)
- Winslow Homer and the Critics: Forging
a National Art in the I870s (8/30/00)
- A Fair Wind" - Maritime Paintings
by Winslow Homer (4/15/00)
- Winslow Homer Facing Nature (2/20/00)
- The Art of American Life: Winslow
Homer's Graphics (1857-1877) (10/18/99)
- Winslow Homer: Early Prints and Paintings
(9/11/99)
- Winslow Homer (1836-1910) (10/7/99)
- Winslow Homer: Works on Paper (8/11/99)
- Winslow Homer: Illustrating America
(5/15/99)
- Winslow Homer and the Elusive African-American
Boy (1/16/99)
- Winslow Homer (1999)
- Winslow Homer: Facing Nature (4/7/98)
this streaming slide show:
- Winslow Homer's Right
and Left from the National Gallery of Art is a narrated show interpreting
one painting. Narration is by Nicolai Cikovsky Jr., senior curator of American
and British paintings. A transcript is included in the presentation.
-
this online audio segment from the Virginia Museum of
Fine Arts:
- Art on the Air features two-minute radio artist and curator
interviews narrated by Daphne Maxwell Reid and are produced by the Virginia
Museum of Fine Arts and New Millennium Studios, and directed by Ruth Twiggs
and Anne Barriault, Virginia Museum of Fine Arts. The broadcasts focus
on works of art and artists, materials, and techniques. Sample
selections from 2004 include Winslow Homer. (right: Art on the Air
graphic courtesy of Virginia Museum of Fine Arts)
and these online resources for Winslow Homer:
- Tour:
Winslow Homer Watercolors -- A Survey of Themes and Styles from
the National Gallery of Art
- Artcyclopedia.com for links to images of Winslow
Homer paintings.
- Winslow Homer an encyclopedic
online resource by Tony Harrison
- Winslow Homer: The Obtuse
Bard, by Peter Bueschen
- From The Art Bulletin Antipastoralism
in early Winslow Homer,(essay) March, 1998 by Kenneth Haltman
- From Magazine Antiques The
Courtship of Winslow Homer - letters reveal relationship with Helena de
Kay, Feb, 2002 by Sarah Burns; Winslow
Homer and the critics in the 1870s - painter, August, 2001 by Margaret
C. Conrads; The
language of flowers and other floral symbolism used by Winslow Homer, Nov,
1999 by Judith Walsh; Robert
Sterling as a collector of Homer - painter Winslow Homer - Sterling and
Francine Clark Art Institute, Oct, 1997 by Franklin Kelly; 'Driftwood',
Winslow Homer's final painting, July, 1996 by Theodore E. Stebbins, Jr.
- Winslow
Homer Collection Online
TFAO also suggests these DVD or VHS videos:
- Atlantic Coast of Winslow Homer, The Introduces painter Winslow
Homer (1836--1910) and shows his work featuring scenes along the Atlantic
Ocean. 35-minute video Description source: Amon
Carter Museum Teacher Resource Center. The Museum contains a comprehensive
lending library including many videos.
-
- Winslow Homer: An American Original is a 49 minute 1999 HBO
Artists' Specials series program directed by Graeme Lynch and produced
by Devine Entertainment. The artist
Winslow Homer
has become famous for his illustrations of battle scenes during the Civil
War, but he feels disenchanted with what he has experienced and withdraws
to a quiet farm. There he meets a pair of teenagers whose lives have been
shaken by the war. Together, Homer and the kids learn from each other and
move forward with life.
-
- Winslow Homer: The Nature of the Artist is a 29 minute
1986 video directed by Steve York from the National Gallery of Art Series.
The art of Winslow
Homer is examined in this profile
of the American artist, from his early illustrations of the Civil War and
his picturesque scenes of the country and shore, to the powerful images
of nature that characterize his mature and late work. Commentary by the
American art historian John Wilmerding provides a guide to Homer's artistic
progress and to his achievements, particularly his transformation of the
watercolor medium from the purely descriptive into a highly expressive
vehicle.
-
- TFAO does not maintain a lending library of videos or sell videos.
Click here for
information on how to borrow or purchase copies of VHS videos and DVDs
listed in TFAO's Videos -DVD/VHS, an authoritative guide to videos in VHS and DVD format
Links to sources of information outside of our web site
are provided only as referrals for your further consideration. Please use
due diligence in judging the quality of information contained in these and
all other web sites. Information from linked sources may be inaccurate or
out of date. Traditional Fine Arts Organization,
Inc. (TFAO)
neither recommends or endorses these referenced organizations. Although
TFAO includes links to other web sites, it takes no responsibility for the
content or information contained on those other sites, nor exerts any editorial
or other control over them. For more information on evaluating web pages
see TFAO's General Resources section in
Online Resources for Collectors and Students of Art History.
Read more articles and essays concerning this institutional
source by visiting the sub-index page for the San
Diego Museum of Art in Resource Library.
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