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Tag: American

  • Kip’s Castle – My Visit to a New Jersey Mansion

    Kip’s Castle – My Visit to a New Jersey Mansion

    Updated with news photos from my Christmas 2017 visit to Kip’s Castle. Click on the photo gallery below!   I recently took some time to visit a local landmark – Kip’s Castle in Verona, New Jersey. The former home of textile industrialist Frederic Ellsworth Kip and his family, Kip’s Castle is a sprawling stone mansion at the very top…

  • Four Magical Christmas and Winter Paintings

    Four Magical Christmas and Winter Paintings

    Eager to get into the holiday spirit? Enjoy this selection of winter and Christmas-themed paintings by American, British, and European artists.

  • Gargoyles and Grotesques of City Museum, St. Louis, Missouri

    According to the photographer’s caption on flickr, this grotesque can be found at the City Museum in St. Louis, Missouri. Not being familiar with that particular institution but assuming it was an art museum, I searched online to figure out if this carving is a feature of the building or part of its collection. Instead, I…

  • Gargoyles and Grotesques of the City College of New York

    I freely admit that I haven’t been great about posting gargoyles over the past few months, but I recently found a reader grotesque that I hadn’t seen before, and it seems to have snapped me back into action. This scholarly fellow attends the City College of New York. I believe that he resides on the…

  • Hudson River School Day

    Hudson River School Day

    Thomas Cole and Frederick Edwin Church, the two most prominent Hudson River School painters, both had homes and studios in the Catskill area of New York. One summer day, I went up there to visit the two houses, which are now museums open to the public for tours. This was my experience.

  • Houston Street by George Luks

    George Luks (1866-1933) was an American social realist painter. He is known best for his images of New York City, specifically its working-class and immigrant neighborhoods, and his energetic style seems to suit these scenes’ vibrancy perfectly. He also studied and painted in Europe. Along with fellow American painters of urban life, Luks was part of the…

  • Gargoyles and Grotesques of the Turnblad Mansion, Minneapolis

    I belong to a wonderful group on Facebook called Mansions of the Gilded Age. Last month, I asked some of my fellow group members whether they knew of any gargoyles on Gilded Age homes. They came back with quite a few great examples, including the Turnblad Mansion in Minneapolis. Commissioned by Swedish-born newspaper publisher Swan Turnblad…

  • Paris La Nuit by Charles Courtney Curran

    Paris La Nuit by Charles Courtney Curran

    I think there’s something quite fascinating about paintings of Europe by American artists. It’s interesting to compare how European cities look through American eyes with American scenes and with European artists’ representations of the same cities. Does a Frenchman represent Paris differently than an American? How does an American see London compared with how he sees New York? Since so many nineteenth…

  • The Cathedrals of Broadway by Florine Stettheimer

    The Cathedrals of Broadway by Florine Stettheimer

    The Cathedrals of Broadway, from a series of four paintings by American artist Florine Stettmheimer about life in 1920s-40s New York.

  • May Night by Willard Metcalf

    May Night by Willard Metcalf

    I thought that the title of this painting made it appropriate for today. Willard Metcalf (1858-1925) was an influential American artist from New England. He painted this work in Old Lyme, Connecticut when he was associated with the art colony there.* I love the mystery and beauty of this painting. Who is the girl? What…

  • Carnation, Lily, Lily, Rose by John Singer Sargent

    Carnation, Lily, Lily, Rose by John Singer Sargent

    Carnation, Lily, Lily, Rose is a lovely, dreamlike painting by John Singer Sargent. It depicts two little girls with Japanese lanterns in a setting of pale flowers.

  • Etretat by Henry A. Bacon

    Right now, the weather is pretty crummy where I live, so I definitely picked this painting for reasons of escapism. I also thought it was a watercolor until I read the description. I’m always amazed by oil paintings that manage to convey something of watercolor’s characteristic lightness. Henry A. Bacon (1839-1912) was an American painter…

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The mission of A Scholarly Skater Art History is to make historical art and architecture accessible to everyone.
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Art history is an inherently subjective field, and my perspective isn’t the only one. I encourage all my readers to seek out differing opinions and read multiple sources to get a broader and more complete view of this complex and fascinating field of study. Read my disclaimers for more information.

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