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A Clam-Bake

1873
watercolor, gouache, and graphite
Sheet - h:19.70 w:34.60 cm (h:7 3/4 w:13 9/16 inches)

Cleveland Museum of Art

Cleveland, OH

 GAAnonymous
A Fisherman's Daughter

1873
watercolor and gouache over graphite
Sheet - h:24.20 w:32.90 cm (h:9 1/2 w:12 15/16 inches)

Cleveland Museum of Art

Cleveland, OH

 GAAnonymous
Army Boots

1865
oil on canvas
14 x 18 in. (35.5 x 45.7 cm)

Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden, Smithsonian Institution

Washington, D.C.

 GAAnonymous
Boy with Anchor

1873
watercolor and gouache with graphite
Sheet - h:19.40 w:34.90 cm (h:7 5/8 w:13 11/16 inches)

Cleveland Museum of Art

Cleveland, OH

 GAAnonymous
Cannon Rock

1895
oil on canvas
40 x 40 in. (101.6 x 101.6 cm)

Metropolitan Museum of Art

New York, NY

 UnratedAnonymous
Dad's Coming

1873
Wood engraving on buff woven paper
233 x 348 mm (image); 276 x 396 mm (sheet)

Art Institute of Chicago

Chicago, IL

 GAAnonymous
Girl and Laurel

1879
oil on canvas
22 5/8 x 15 3/4 in. 57.5 x 40.0 cm with frame: 28 1/4 x 21 1/4 x 1 7/8 in. 71.6 x 53.8 x 4.8 cm

Detroit Institute of Arts

Detroit, MI

 GAAnonymous
Girl with Pail

Oil on wood panel
12 1/4 X 9 1/4 IN. (30.8 X 23.3 CM.)

Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden, Smithsonian Institution

Washington, D.C.

 GAAnonymous
Indian Camp, Roberval, P.Q.

1895
watercolor with gouache over graphite
Sheet - h:35.40 w:50.60 cm (h:13 7/8 w:19 7/8 inches)

Cleveland Museum of Art

Cleveland, OH

notes
In 1895, Winslow Homer produced 25 watercolors while on a fishing expedition in Canada. Indian Camp, Roberval, P.Q. was painted at Lake St. John, about 100 miles north of Quebec and shows Montangnais Indians at Pont Bleue. Using straightforward visual material, Homer produced an unusual and arresting composition.
GAAnonymous
Leaping Trout

1889
watercolor over graphite
Sheet - h:35.00 w:50.60 cm (h:13 3/4 w:19 7/8 inches)

Cleveland Museum of Art

Cleveland, OH

notes
Homer's Leaping Trout is one of a series of watercolors of jumping fish that he created in the 1880s and early 1890s. Scenes of trout fishing were common in English and American art of the period, but Homer's approach was unusual. He presented the scene from the viewpoint of a fish, not that of a fisherman, thus dramatizing the subject in both...
GAAnonymous
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