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Robert Torchia, “William Glackens/Family Group/1910/1911,” American Paintings, 1900–1945, NGA Online Editions, https://purl.org/nga/collection/artobject/52444 (accessed April 21, 2025).

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Overview

William Glackens is primarily remembered as a member of the eclectic group of artists called The Eight, many of whom were attracted to urban realist subjects. This bright, intimate autobiographical painting is indebted to French impressionism and the work of Auguste Renoir (French, 1841 - 1919). A modern conversation piece and one of the artist’s most ambitious compositions, Family Group constitutes an informal group portrait that represents, from left to right, the artist’s sister-in-law Irene Dimock; his wife, Edith Dimock Glackens; his son and future biographer, Ira Glackens; and Edith’s lifelong friend Grace Dwight Morgan all assembled in the living room of the Glackens’ New York apartment at 23 Fifth Avenue. In addition to recording the likenesses of the sitters, the painting serves as a documentary record of the family’s personal relationships, surroundings, and possessions.

Family Group was featured in New York in 1913 at the Armory Show, an exhibition that introduced various aspects of European modernism to a popular audience in the United States. A critic praised it as “one of the most radiant, courageous, color paintings America has produced . . . it has grace, humanity and the quality that the artists call painting.”

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