Object Details
Artist
George Bellows, born Columbus, OH 1882-died New York City 1925
Sitter
Mrs. Phillip Wase
Mrs. Phillip Wase
Mr. Phillip Wase
Mr. Phillip Wase
Luce Center Label
George Bellows spent summers in Woodstock, New York, where Mrs. Wase worked as a cleaning woman and her husband was a gardener. Bellows chose to show the couple stiffly posed and strangely detached from one another. Mrs. Wase’s face shows the worries of a lifetime, and Mr. Wase stares off into the distance, as if thinking of another time or place. Between them, a portrait, perhaps of Mrs. Wase as a bride, hangs on the wall. Their clothes match the shadowy gray of the parlor. Bellows painted suggestions of a brilliantly green summer day beyond the closed shutters, as if to emphasize the distance between youthful optimism and the resignation of old age. The artist experimented with new ways to paint portraits throughout his career, and from 1915 to 1920 he exhibited with the National Association of Portrait Painters, whose mission was to separate from “the tiresomely conventional and perfunctory portrait.” (Myers, “‘The Most Searching Place in the World’: Bellows and Portraiture,” in Quick et al., The Paintings of George Bellows, 1992)
Credit Line
Smithsonian American Art Museum, Gift of Paul Mellon
Date
1924
Object number
1967.39.1
Restrictions & Rights
CC0
Type
Painting
Medium
oil on canvas
Dimensions
51 1/4 x 63 in. (130.2 x 159.9 cm.)
See more items in
Smithsonian American Art Museum Collection
Department
Painting and Sculpture
On View
Smithsonian American Art Museum, 1st Floor, South Wing
Data Source
Smithsonian American Art Museum
Topic
Animal\bird\parrot
Object\art object\painting
Object\furniture\couch
Portrait group\family\spouses
Portrait female\knee length
Portrait female\elderly
Portrait male\knee length
Portrait male\elderly
Link to Original Record
Record ID
saam_1967.39.1