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A celebration of the American painter's life and work in the region
he loved best In 1883 American artist Winslow Homer (1836-1910)
moved his studio from New York City to Prouts Neck, a slip of
coastline just south of Portland, Maine. Here, over the course of
twenty-five years, Homer produced his most celebrated and
emotionally powerful paintings, which often depicted the dramatic
views and storm-strewn skies around his home. Homer's influence and
the Prouts Neck area would have a profound effect on the rise of a
new American modernism, inspiring the artists who followed him.
This beautifully illustrated catalogue celebrates Homer's legacy at
Prouts Neck, and documents the Portland Museum of Art's six-year
conservation project to preserve the Winslow Homer Studio, the
former carriage house in which Homer lived and worked. Photographs
of the studio and site, never before open to the public, highlight
views that are recognizable as the subject of so many of Homer's
paintings. Essays by leading scholars examine his iconic
masterpieces; his artistic development in Prouts Neck; the
architecture of his studio; his relationship to French painting;
and the full range of his marine paintings. Published in
association with the Portland Museum of Art Exhibition Schedule:
Portland Museum of Art(09/22/12-12/30/12)
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