Вуд Грант - Пахота 1936

Study for Dinner for Threshers 1934 Death on the Ridge Road 1935 Return From Bohemia 1935 Plowing 1936 Sentimental 1936 Spring Turning 1936 Supporter 1936
Вуд Грант - Пахота 1936

Пахота 1936
59x74см цветной карандаш с древесным углем и белой непрозрачной краской на оргалите
Philadelphia Museum of Art

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From Philadelphia Museum of Art:
The principal advocate for American Regionalism's focus upon local subject matter, Grant Wood was far from a countrified farmer. He was trained in art, design, and metalwork; studied in Chicago, Minneapolis, and Paris; and traveled in Europe. During the Depression, his idealized landscapes were criticized for portraying a nostalgic pastoral calm at odds with the reality of Iowa's collapsing farm economy. However, Wood's landscape is also modern: the large quiltlike squares of earth and streamlined curves of undulating fields resemble the simplified forms of modern industrial design, and the scale of work shown is a feat of modern machinery. Still, there is breathtaking romance in Wood's vision of a world perfectly formed by a solitary plowman.