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List of illustrations

  • Street Scene in Snow (NYC)
  • West Side Docks
  • Portrait of Willie Gee
  • The Night after San Juan
  • The Haymarket
  • East River Snow
  • The Spielers
  • The Butcher Boy
  • Whistling Boy
  • The Wrestlers
  • Otis Skinner as Col. Bridau in The Honor of the Family
  • Sunday, Women Drying their Hair
  • Pigeons
  • Sixth Avenue & 30th Street, New York City
  • Washington Square
  • At Mouquin's
  • The Coffee Line
  • The Swing
  • The Hippodrome, London
  • Mural
  • The Tambourine
  • The Mission Tent
  • Les Pauvres
  • Cover of The Masses (In Georgia, The Southern Demonstrates His Superiority)
  • Cross Breaker
  • Beware of Pickpockets
  • Class Consciousness
  • At the Shore
  • Forty-two Kids
  • Stag at Sharkey's
  • Freight Yards
  • The Bridge
  • The Road Roller
  • Tyrolean Mountains
  • Composition with Three Figures
  • Landscape with Farm
  • Church Interior
  • Summer
  • Armory Show, Sixty-ninth Regiment Armory, New York City
  • Beefsteak Dinner for the Critics
  • Flying Horses
  • Portrait of a Child
  • Early Summer, Vermont
  • Adventure
  • Dances
  • Conception Synchromy
  • Synchromy
  • Improvisation to Form
  • Invention–Dance
  • Blue Devils Marching down Fifth Avenue
  • Farm to Win "Over There," poster
  • Dawn of Peace
  • Carry On
  • Brass Band
  • Cosmic Synchromy
  • Improvisation No. 1
  • Composition II
  • Jazz
  • Grandmother
  • Egg Beater
  • The Bride Stripped Bare by Her Bachelors, Even (Large Glass)
  • Love Parade (Parade Amoureuse)
  • Brooklyn Bridge
  • Trees
  • After Sir Christopher Wren
  • Incense of a New Church
  • Bucks County Barn
  • Machine Sans Nom
  • Telephone
  • Still Life, Pitcher
  • Paquebot, Paris
  • Upper Deck
  • Church Street El
  • Battle of Lights, Coney Island
  • The Voice of the City of New York Interpreted: The Port (The Harbor, The Battery)
  • Corporation Shed
  • Manhattan
  • Brooklyn Ice House
  • Home for Christmas
  • The Bridge
  • Blue and Green Music
  • Bowls
  • Calla with Roses
  • High Bridge
  • Radiator Building—Night, New York
  • Still Life with Yellow Green Chair
  • Silktown on the Passaic
  • Woolworth Building, No. 31
  • Marin's Island, Maine
  • Tree and Sea, Maine
  • Pertaining to Deer Isle, The Harbour, Deer Island, Maine Series No. 27
  • Composition–Three Figures
  • New York at Night
  • The Two Musicians
  • The Rabbi
  • Still-Life, Egyptian Pot
  • Caucus
  • Harlequin
  • Victoria
  • Acrobat in Green
  • Maine Landscape, Autumn no. 13
  • The Dark Mountain
  • Movements
  • New Mexico Recollections
  • Color Analogy
  • Circus
  • George Biddle Playing the Flute
  • Resting at the Bazaar
  • Notre Dame, Paris
  • Girl in Green and Rose
  • Child Holding Apple
  • Two Standing Figures
  • Seated Nude
  • Boy Stealing Fruit
  • Squash
  • Sleeping Girl
  • Jean
  • Promenade
  • Padre
  • Crucifixion
  • The Doll and The Monster
  • Bar
  • Bus View
  • Trees
  • Night Wind
  • Watering Time
  • House of Mystery
  • February Thaw
  • October
  • Orchestra
  • Farewell to Union Square
  • Three Figures
Free
Description: American Painting: From the Armory Show to the Depression
Contents
PublisherPrinceton University Press
https://doi.org/10.37862/aaeportal.00013.003
Free
Description: American Painting: From the Armory Show to the Depression
~THE research and writing of this book, which was interrupted by military service during World War II, was begun more than a decade ago. Because of a lamentable dearth of scholarship in the area of American art, I was faced from the very beginning with the problem of reconstructing the history of a vital period in our culture out of a wealth of...
PublisherPrinceton University Press
Related print edition pages: pp.v-
https://doi.org/10.37862/aaeportal.00013.001
Free
Description: American Painting: From the Armory Show to the Depression
THE dates 1913 for the Armory Show and 1929 for the depression mark the limits of an important phase of American art. Like all such dates, they are somewhat arbitrary and in any case only approximate, but they do delimit that period in American art during which the influence of what is commonly called “modern art” made its first impact felt in...
PublisherPrinceton University Press
Related print edition pages: pp.vi-
https://doi.org/10.37862/aaeportal.00013.002
Free
Description: American Painting: From the Armory Show to the Depression
Illustrations
PublisherPrinceton University Press
https://doi.org/10.37862/aaeportal.00013.004
Description: American Painting: From the Armory Show to the Depression
DURING the first decade of the twentieth century, American art was brazenly flaunting its delusions of grandeur...
PublisherPrinceton University Press
Related print edition pages: pp.2-44
https://doi.org/10.37862/aaeportal.00013.005

Access to this content is only available to subscribers. If you are at an institution that currently subscribes to the A&AePortal, please login to your VPN before accessing the site. If you have already purchased an individual subscription, please sign in to your account to access the content. Learn more about subscriptions.

Description: American Painting: From the Armory Show to the Depression
THE International Exhibition of Modern Art held in New York at the Sixty-ninth Regiment Armory from February 17th to March 15th, 1913...
PublisherPrinceton University Press
Related print edition pages: pp.46-67
https://doi.org/10.37862/aaeportal.00013.006

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Description: American Painting: From the Armory Show to the Depression
THE direction of American art was not changed by the World War. The events of the war found their way into only a fraction of our art and if those years of crisis...
PublisherPrinceton University Press
Related print edition pages: pp.71-76
https://doi.org/10.37862/aaeportal.00013.007

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Description: American Painting: From the Armory Show to the Depression
THE “roaring twenties,” the “golden age,” when America was riding the crest of economic plenty, was curiously enough the heyday...
PublisherPrinceton University Press
Related print edition pages: pp.79-99
https://doi.org/10.37862/aaeportal.00013.008

Access to this content is only available to subscribers. If you are at an institution that currently subscribes to the A&AePortal, please login to your VPN before accessing the site. If you have already purchased an individual subscription, please sign in to your account to access the content. Learn more about subscriptions.

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Description: American Painting: From the Armory Show to the Depression
MODERNISM had transformed the art of a romantic like Davies and a realist like Sloan; it had even influenced for a brief span...
PublisherPrinceton University Press
Related print edition pages: pp.150-164
https://doi.org/10.37862/aaeportal.00013.010

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Description: American Painting: From the Armory Show to the Depression
THE realist strain which was in the ascendancy early in the century had been submerged, as we have already seen, by the spread of modernism...
PublisherPrinceton University Press
Related print edition pages: pp.166-195
https://doi.org/10.37862/aaeportal.00013.011

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Description: American Painting: From the Armory Show to the Depression
~THE twenties were dominated by French modernism. German Expressionism had little importance, affecting only a few Americans in the twenties—Albert Bloch, Yasuo Kuniyoshi, Benjamin Kopman, and, to some degree, Marsden Hartley. The Cubist group, which owed allegiance to Cézanne and Picasso, developed along three divergent lines; from Cubism...
PublisherPrinceton University Press
Related print edition pages: pp.196-
https://doi.org/10.37862/aaeportal.00013.012

Access to this content is only available to subscribers. If you are at an institution that currently subscribes to the A&AePortal, please login to your VPN before accessing the site. If you have already purchased an individual subscription, please sign in to your account to access the content. Learn more about subscriptions.

Free
Description: American Painting: From the Armory Show to the Depression
Bibliography
PublisherPrinceton University Press
https://doi.org/10.37862/aaeportal.00013.013
Free
Description: American Painting: From the Armory Show to the Depression
Index
PublisherPrinceton University Press
https://doi.org/10.37862/aaeportal.00013.014
American Painting: From the Armory Show to the Depression
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