ArtistsWinslow Homer
Winslow Homer

Winslow Homer

Artist
Representation
None documented
0
Institutional Exhibitions
16
Works in Collection
41
Assets Indexed
3
Authority-backed Facts
0
Publications Referenced
50%
Profile Completeness

Cultural Positioning

Movements
No movements recorded
Related Artists
No edges recorded
Influence Graph
No influence edges encoded yet.
About

Why this artist matters now

One of the most universally acclaimed realist painters America has produced, Homer is particularly known for his scenes of outdoor life. The Boston-born artist began his career as an illustrator for Harper's (after an apprenticeship in lithography), reporting pictorially from the Civil War battlefront. The war and its aftermath became a source of imagery for him as he began to concentrate on oil painting, making his first visit to Europe in late 1866, and achieving rapid critical success. While summering in Gloucester, Massachusetts, in 1873, Homer first began to paint seriously in watercolor; it would eventually become his primary medium, allowing him to explore nuances of light, color, and composition in a fluid and spontaneous manner. Homer's outdoor genre scenes encompassed a variety of subjects, including children and young adults (often in summertime leisure pursuits), wilderness guides, and rural blacks in the post-Civil War era. In 1881, he spent almost two years in the fishi

Source: Artsy · Trust score: 85% · Updated 1mo ago

Graph relationships

Taste overlap and adjacency

Movement
Medium
Related Artists
6 in graph
Canonical record

Artworks (16)

View all 16 artworks →
Record

Images

18 assets
Artsy artwork: Lemon (1876)
Artsy
Artsy artwork: Sketchbook Page
Artsy
Artsy artwork: Undertow (1886)
Artsy
Artsy artwork: Saved (1889)
Artsy
Artsy artist portrait
Artsy
Winslow Homer (1863)
Smithsonian Institution
A Clam-Bake (1873)
Cleveland Museum of Art
Boy with Anchor (1873)
Cleveland Museum of Art
View all 18 media items →
Record

Movements and affiliations

No movements linked yet
Record

Exhibitions and timeline

No exhibitions or timeline entries yet