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Harvest Scene

Harvest Scene

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Girl With Hay Rake

Girl With Hay Rake

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Girl Shelling Peas

Girl Shelling Peas

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Girl Picking Apple Blossoms

Girl Picking Apple Blossoms

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Girl Carrying A Basket

Girl Carrying A Basket

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Farmer

Farmer

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Fishing Boats Key West

Fishing Boats Key West

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Fish And Butterflies

Fish And Butterflies

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Feeding Time

Feeding Time

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Farmyard

Farmyard

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Farmyard Scene

Farmyard Scene

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Eight Bells

Eight Bells

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Eastern Point

Eastern Point

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East Hampton Beach

East Hampton Beach

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Eagle Head

Eagle Head

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Deer Drinking

Deer Drinking

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Danger

Danger

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Dad Coming

Dad Coming

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Croquet Scene

Croquet Scene

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Coast Of Maine

Coast Of Maine

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Channel Bass

Channel Bass

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Casting Number Two

Casting Number Two

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Cannon Rock

Cannon Rock

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Campfire Adirondacks

Campfire Adirondacks

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Kunstdrucke von Winslow Homer

Collection: Art prints by Winslow Homer

Winslow Homer was an American painter and is considered one of the most influential and independent figures in 19th century American art history - an artist whose work advanced the development of American painting from the illustrative narrative tradition to autonomous pictorial art with a consistency and originality that made him a reference figure of his generation during his lifetime and whose importance has remained unbroken ever since. He was born in Boston in 1836 and began his artistic career not at an academy, but as an illustrator, first at a lithography company in Boston and later as a freelance illustrator for the popular magazine "Harper's Weekly", for which he went into the field as a war correspondent during the American Civil War and captured scenes of camp life, soldiers and everyday life in the war, which brought him his first widespread fame and in which the qualities that were to characterize his entire later work are already recognizable: an unerring sense for the essential gesture, a direct, unsentimental gift for observation and an ability for composition that turns the immediate into something lasting.

After the Civil War, Homer developed a pictorial language that stubbornly resisted the fashions of his time. While many American painters of his generation looked to Europe and adopted the academic or impressionist models of the continent, Homer pursued a decidedly independent path rooted in the American experience, landscape and way of life. A brief trip to Paris in 1867 left surprisingly few direct traces in his work, and even an extended stay in the English fishing village of Cullercoats in the early 1880s, which triggered a profound thematic shift in his oeuvre, did not lead to an adoption of European models, but to a deepening and narrowing of his own view of the elemental: Man, the sea and the relentless confrontation between the two.

From the 1880s, after his return from England and his relocation to the solitude of Prouts Neck on the Maine coast, Homer's work underwent the transformation that secured his lasting place in art history. The narrative scenes of country life and the beach idylls of his earlier years gave way to a concentrated, reduced pictorial world that focused on the sea - not as a romantic backdrop or picturesque motif, but as an elemental force to which man is exposed in all his vulnerability. Fishermen in heavy seas, rescue teams in storms, lonely hunters and canoeists in the Canadian wilderness - Homer treated all of this with a painterly directness and dramatic persuasiveness that make his works from this period among the most impressive in American painting. His large seascapes in particular, in which waves, rocks and light merge into a pictorial unity of almost abstract power, are among the most enduring achievements of his oeuvre.

Stylistically, Homer developed a pictorial language of increasing boldness and simplification. His use of color became stronger and more direct, his compositions more reduced and monumental, his brushwork broader and more confident. In his watercolors, which he created in large numbers and of extraordinary quality, he achieved a freedom and immediacy that occasionally surpassed his oil paintings, making him one of the most important watercolorists in American art history. These watercolors, created on trips to the Adirondacks, Florida and the Caribbean, combine lightness and precision to create works of enduring freshness and coloristic conviction.

Winslow Homer lived the last decades of his life in self-imposed solitude in Prouts Neck, rarely receiving visitors, avoiding the art world of the cities and letting his work speak for itself. He died in Maine in 1910, leaving behind an oeuvre of extraordinary inner unity and lasting significance. Today, Winslow Homer is considered one of the most important American painters of all time, whose works are among the most highly regarded in the major American museums and whose combination of painterly power, elementary subject matter and unerring powers of observation make him one of the most enduring voices in American art history.