Preview | Description | Notes
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![]() | Willimantic Thread Factory 1893 Brooklyn Museum New York, NY | GA | Anonymous | |
![]() | Girl in Black 1910 Brooklyn Museum New York, NY | GA | Anonymous | |
![]() | Landscape after 1900 Smithsonian American Art Museum Washington, D.C. | ![]() identified with her. (Cummings, "Home Is the Starting Place: J. Alden Weir and the Spirit of Place," J. Alden Weir: A Place of His Own, 1991). Perhaps the ghostly figure in the foreground is meant to suggest his wife's spirit dwelling under the trees. | GA | Anonymous |
![]() | A Gentlewoman 1906 Smithsonian American Art Museum Washington, D.C. | ![]() h feelings, artists created images like these of quiet interior scenes, a visually soothing antidote to an unquiet age. | GA | Anonymous |
![]() | At the Water Trough 1876-1877 Smithsonian American Art Museum Washington, D.C. | GA | Anonymous | |
![]() | Children Burying a Bird 1878 Smithsonian American Art Museum Washington, D.C. | GA | Anonymous | |
![]() | Hunter and Dogs oil on canvas Smithsonian American Art Museum Washington, D.C. | GA | Anonymous | |
![]() | Portrait of a Lady with a Dog (Anna Baker Weir) ca. 1890 Smithsonian American Art Museum Washington, D.C. | GA | Anonymous | |
![]() | Portrait of Wyatt Eaton ca. 1878 Smithsonian American Art Museum Washington, D.C. | GA | Anonymous | |
![]() | The Open Book 1891 Smithsonian American Art Museum Washington, D.C. | GA | Anonymous |
- Julian Alden Weir