Preview | Description | Notes | Content | Updated by |
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Girl In Yellow Scarf 1904 Butler Institute of American Art Youngstown, OH | plified outlines, broad, flat planes of slightly modulated color, and the noble calm that cloaked their humanity. In paintings executed after 1906, Hawthorne revealed a new clarity in ideas of style, but more importantly, he instilled in his subjects a quiet dignity that reaffirms the beauty and glory of human experience. | GA | Anonymous | |
Refining Oil c. 1910 Detroit Institute of Arts Detroit, MI | GA | Anonymous | ||
The Story (The Diners; Pleasures Of The Table) 1898 Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden, Smithsonian Institution Washington, D.C. | GA | Anonymous | ||
The Fisherman's Wife 1897-1910 - before 1911 Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden, Smithsonian Institution Washington, D.C. | GA | Anonymous | ||
Portrait Of Tom Powe 1930 Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden, Smithsonian Institution Washington, D.C. | GA | Anonymous | ||
The Trousseau 1910 Metropolitan Museum of Art New York, NY | GA | Anonymous | ||
The Red Bow 1902 Brooklyn Museum New York, NY | GA | Anonymous | ||
The Child ca. 1920 Brooklyn Museum New York, NY | GA | Anonymous | ||
The Offering c. 1915 Cleveland Museum of Art Cleveland, OH | GA | Anonymous | ||
Provincetown Fisherman about 1915 Indianapolis Museum of Art Indianapolis, IN | GA | Anonymous |
- Charles Webster Hawthorne