PreviewDescription
ArtistNotes
View Of The Spot Where General Ross Fell, Near Baltimore, Plate Six Of The First Number Of Picturesque Views Of American Scenery

by John Hill

1819/21
Aquatint with etching and hand-coloring on cream woven paper
250 x 351 mm (image); 301 x 392 mm (plate); 380 x 566 mm (sheet)

Art Institute of Chicago

Chicago, IL

Hill, John 
View of Peters' Island on the Schuylkill

by John Neagle

1827
oil on canvas
63.2 x 91.1 cm (24 7/8 x 35 7/8 in.)

Art Institute of Chicago

Chicago, IL

Neagle, John 
View Near The Schuylkill Falls, Pennsylvania, Plate Five Of The First Number Of Picturesque Views Of American Scenery

by John Hill

1819/21
Aquatint with etching and hand-coloring on cream woven paper
333 x 255 mm (image); 390 x 301 mm (plate); 560 x 374 mm (sheet)

Art Institute of Chicago

Chicago, IL

Hill, John 
View By Moonlight, Near Fayetteville, Plate Three Of The Second Number Of Picturesque Views Of American Scenery

by John Hill

1819/21
Aquatint with etching and hand-coloring on cream woven paper
339 x 271 mm (image); 385 x 302 mm (plate); 563 x 385 mm (sheet)

Art Institute of Chicago

Chicago, IL

Hill, John 
View Above The Falls Of Schuylkill, Plate Three Of The First Number Of Picturesque Views Of American Scenery

by John Hill

1819/21
Aquatint with etching and hand-coloring on cream woven paper
244 x 343 mm (image); 300 x 389 mm (plate); 382 x 560 mm (sheet)

Art Institute of Chicago

Chicago, IL

Hill, John 
Venetian Glass Workers

by John Singer Sargent

1880-82
Oil on canvas
55.9 x 83.8 cm (22 x 33 in.)

Art Institute of Chicago

Chicago, IL

Sargent, John Singernotes
In many of Sargent’s Venetian Studies of 1880 and 1882 he shows Venetian women stringing glass beads for the tourist trade. In a footnote of Linda Ayres essay, she explains that what they are holding are long colored glass tubes. These glass tubes (also called cane) were probably made in Murano, then cut to bead size and passed on to women...
Vaudeville Singer

by Charles Demuth

1918
Watercolor with graphite on cream laid paper
286 x 204 mm

Art Institute of Chicago

Chicago, IL

Demuth, Charles 
Vase of Flowers

by Julian Alden Weir

Watercolor on cream board
341 x 417 mm

Art Institute of Chicago

Chicago, IL

Weir, Julian Alden 
Two Women In A Doorway

by Lawrence Carmichael Earle

1882
Watercolor and gouache, over traces of graphite, on cream watercolor paper, laid down on wood-pulp board
575 x 401 mm

Art Institute of Chicago

Chicago, IL

Earle, Lawrence Carmichael 
Twentieth Century Ruin

by Alexander Brook

1932
Oil on canvas
65.4 x 91.9 cm (25 3/4 x 35 7/8 in.)

Art Institute of Chicago

Chicago, IL

Brook, Alexander 
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