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The paintings he did produce, deepened by intimations of mortality, include some of the most complex pictures of his career. Homer traveled to Nassau in the winter of 1884–1885 at the request ofCentury Magazine, which commissioned illustrations for an article on the popular tourist destination. There Homer executed more than 30 watercolors whose subjects are representative of the scenery of the island and lives of its citizens; however, his greater interest was in capturing the light and atmosphere of the region. In March 1881, Homer sailed from New York to England, where he spent 20 months in the small fishing village of Cullercoats on the North Sea. Numerous preliminary studies and thecareful planningevident in these works reflect his aspiration to construct a more classical, stable art of seriousness and gravity.

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Homer would travel to Europe several times in an informal capacity but he would never lose his roots within his work, and never wished to. His approach also took in other influences that were connected to his early career as a professional illustrator and he looked outside the boundaries of fine art for new ideas. This approach helped to bring a unique nature to his work and he continued to focus on American locations throughout his career. This Homer Winslow Oil Painting reproduction masterpiece is hand painted by a real artist. Unframed paintings are covered with a special protective film, are gently rolled and then placed inside a strong specially designed tube.
If so, does the downward plunge of the bird on the right indicate that it has been hit, or is it diving to escape? The duck on the left seems frozen, but that stasis does not necessarily reveal its physical condition. With its ambiguous message, unconventional point of view, and diverse sources of inspiration ranging from Japanese art to popular hunting imagery, this painting summarizes the creative complexity of Homer’s late style. Homer’s early works, while mainly set outdoors, are almost all figure paintings. This was a conspicuous departure from the type of pure landscape that dominated 19th-century American art. Homer spent the summer of 1873 in Gloucester, Massachusetts, where he painted this family of a fisherman awaiting his return.
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Although Winslow Homer avoided any discussion of the meaning of his art, the progression of his creative life attests to the presence of a rigorous, principled mind. Continuously refining his artistic efforts, Homer created work that was not only powerful in aesthetic terms but also movingly profound. Acclaimed at his death for his extraordinary achievements, Homer remains today among the most respected and admired figures in the history of American art.

A woman walks along a rocky shoreline, a fishing net with buoys slung over her shoulder. Light gleams on the water behind her while a gull glides in the air above to the right. The model was a local woman named Ida Meserve Harding, who had earlier posed for him. Something has caught the woman's attention, causing her to stop midstride and look back over her shoulder—perhaps a sound raised by whatever has caused the gull to rise from its roost and soar away. Suggesting that the viewer, too, follow her glance, Homer makes the picture’s narrative focus a point just beyond the right edge of the scene.
Stencilled Wall
He painted at least 19 watercolors in Bermuda, a place he visited twice beginning in 1899. He believed them to be “as good work...as I ever did.” They reveal—especially in their fluid washes—the consummate mastery of the medium that Homer had achieved by this point in his career. Homer generally preferred the blue skies and white clouds typical of the island’s climate. Only occasionally, as in the remarkableThe Coming Storm, did he portray ominous weather. Homer would travel to the Caribbean several times and used the region as an inspiration for many paintings.
Homer playfully signed the blackboard in its lower-right corner as though with chalk. Winslow Homer was born in Boston, the second of three sons of Henrietta Benson, an amateur watercolorist, and Charles Savage Homer, a hardware importer. As a young man, he was apprenticed to a commercial lithographer for two years before becoming a freelance illustrator in 1857. Soon he was a major contributor to such popular magazines asHarper’s Weekly. In 1859 he moved to New York to be closer to the publishers that commissioned his illustrations and to pursue his ambitions as a painter.
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He eliminated the wall and placed the figures near the sea, with a ship visible in the distance. Homer spent several months during the summer and late fall of 1878 at Houghton Farm, the country residence of a patron in Mountainville, New York. There he created dozens of watercolors of farm girls and boys playing and pursuing various tasks, including Warm Afternoon. Painted quickly and often outdoors, these watercolors present idyllic scenes of rural life that follow in the European tradition of pastoral painting. If you're considering not framing your painting at all, you may opt for a Gallery Wrap.
Not unlike Paul Gauguin, Homer found his trips to exotic locations to be inspiring for his artwork and explored places like Cuba, Florida, and the Bahamas as early as 1884. Right and Left, one of Homer’s last paintings, is at once a sporting picture and a tragic reflection on life and death. The title refers to the act of shooting the ducks successively with separate barrels of a shotgun. The red flash and billowing gray smoke barely visible at the middle left indicate that a hunter hasjust firedat the pair ofgoldeneye ducks. The picture captures the moment but leaves important questions unresolved.
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As well as featuring the US in most of his career, other neighbouring regions would also appear from time to time. He became interested in ships, boats and even shipwrecks in later life. This helped to bring a further level of uniqueness to his work, as few would work in this manner in the late 19th century. He was not someone to follow the fashions of the day, but rather forged his own path. He would later include figurative work in dramatic scenes at sea, which was just a small extension for his earlier seascapes.
All orders ship with UPS, FedEx or DHL and will arrive directly to your home or office. A tracking number will be emailed to you as soon as the order leaves our studio so you can track it online. All orders ship express and usually arrive within 4-5 days from the shipping date. Due to shipping restraints, many of our framed, stretched, and oversize paintings may take 6-21 days for arrival depending on the safest route determined by the postal service. Winslow Homer concluded the watercolor painting entitled A Wall, Nassau during his trip to the Bahamas in 1898. The artist was deeply inspired by the sunny and tropical landscape and seascapes, resulting in many works, like Palm Tree, Nassau.
The bottom half shows a white wall at a slight angle and loosely painted with shades of gray, blue, and red. To the left, there is an entrance with two columns decorated with pyramid shapes on top in a darker tone. The top of the wall is detailed with specks of dark pigment, while the bottom of the wall depicts a simple ground and subtle hints of green grass. The remarkable confidence and freedom of his handling, with details convincingly suggested but not literally described, make the Key West watercolors some of his most vibrant. Winslow Homer would become one of the most famous seascape artists of all time, particularly within the US. He did learn much from European and Asian artists, but his style evolved into something unique to his home nation.
In the case of Palm Tree, Nassau, however, he is clearly offering a more tranquil summary of this region. Homer remains one of the most appreciated artists from the 19th century and he provided an interesting combination of illustration, oils and watercolours for local US themes. Each canvas reproduction may vary slightly in brush details due to the nature of being hand painted, so no two paintings are the same. An avid angler, he spent much of his time on these trips fishing rather than painting. The Florida pictures of 1903 to 1905 would be Homer’s final series of watercolors.

Two sailors dominate the foreground, but the details of the ship and its riggings have been minimized. In the etching above, one of his finest, Homer has de-emphasized the background rigging and sky even further to underscore the figures’ monumentality. Homer returned to New York in 1882 and faced the challenge of finding a theme as compelling as that which had occupied him in Cullercoats. Homer had almost always set up an emphatic juxtaposition between therole of womenon the shore and that of the men on the sea. As the women determinedly went about their own business, confronted with theinexorable prospect of separation and loss,the men faced tangible physical peril in their constant battle with the elements.