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Homer, Winslow
(b Boston, MA, 24 Feb 1836; d Prouts Neck, ME, 29 Sept 1910). American painter, illustrator and etcher. He was one of the two most admired American late 19th-century artists (the other being Thomas Eakins) and is considered to be the greatest pictorial poet of outdoor life in the USA and its greatest watercolourist. Nominally a landscape painter, in a sense carrying on Hudson River school attitudes, Homer was an artist of power and individuality whose images are metaphors for the relationship of Man and Nature. A careful observer of visual reality, he was at the same time alive to the purely physical properties of pigment and colour, of line and form, and of the patterns they create. His work is characterized by bold, fluid brushwork, strong draughtsmanship and composition, and particularly by a lack of sentimentality.
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- Homer, Winslow
- USA, §III, 2: Painting and graphic arts: 19th-century developments
- dealers
- groups and movements
- methods
- patrons and collectors
- reproductive prints by others
- works
- Animal subjects, §4: 19th century and after
- Bahamas, the, §IV: Painting, graphic arts and sculpture
- Drawing, §IV, 6: 19th century
- History painting, §II, 3: Later 19th century
- Marine painting, §2(iii): Subsequent development: USA
- Music, printed
- Sporting scenes, §4(iii): 18th and 19th centuries: Impressionist painters
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