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Eastman Johnson Catalogue Raisonné
Patricia Hills, PhD, Founder and Director | Abigael MacGibeny, MA, Project Manager

Catalogue Entry

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Photo: Courtesy Menconi + Schoelkopf
13.3 Maine Rustic/Farm, 1860s—Outdoors

In the nineteenth century, attitudes towards work changed, especially in the northern states of America. Although some artists made fun of “country bumpkins,” in general, farm work and farmers began to take on greater prestige and admiration. During the 1860s, Johnson returned to his birthplace in Maine to make studies of maple sugar production and also to seek out subjects of a rural life far removed from slavery. Barn interiors and home interiors show the families of farmers husking corn, winnowing grain, of taking a smoke. Exteriors show farmers at harvest time, loggers cutting trees or simply relaxing. In choosing scenes of rural white America Johnson was following in the tradition of Francis William Edmonds, George H. Durrie, Tompkins H. Matteson, and William Sidney Mount—a tradition popularized by the prints of Currier and Ives. —PH

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Hills no. 13.3.14
Harvest
c.1868
Locale: Maine
Oil on paper board
6 1/4 x 17 in. (15.9 x 43.2 cm)
Initialed lower right: E.J.
Provenance
Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence A. Fleischman, Detroit
Mr. and Mrs. James W. Draper, by 1972
Collection of James P. Draper, Nashville, Tennessee, by April 2020 (by descent)
Exhibitions
1954 M. H. de Young Memorial Museum
M. H. de Young Memorial Museum, San Francisco, Impressionism and Its Influence in American Art, June 8–July 5, 1954, no. 23.
1962 Wildenstein & Co.
Wildenstein & Co, New York, An Exhibition of American Paintings, Watercolors and Drawings of the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries, September 6–29, 1962.
1964a University of Arizona Art Gallery
University of Arizona Art Gallery, Tucson, Arizona, American Painting, 1765–1963, February 1–March 29, 1964.
1972 Whitney Museum
Whitney Museum of American Art, New York, Eastman Johnson: Retrospective Exhibition, March 28–May 14, 1972. (Exhibition catalogue: Hills 1972a), no. 54, b/w illus., p. 53, as Harvest. Traveled to: The Detroit Institute of Arts, Detroit, June 7–July 22, 1972; Cincinnati Art Museum, Cincinnati, August 15–September 30, 1972; Milwaukee Art Center, Milwaukee, October 20–December 3, 1972.
References
Tillim 1962
Tillim, Sidney. Arts Magazine 37, no. 1 (October 1962), p. 52; "Eakins is a noticeable omission, and Bingham to a lesser extent, but Eastman Johnson and Winslow Homer establish the grass roots of American realism…"
Hills 1972a
Hills, Patricia. Eastman Johnson: Retrospective Exhibition. New York: Clarkson N. Potter, 1972. Exhibition catalogue (1972 Whitney Museum), no. 54, p. 53 illus., as Harvest.
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Record last updated December 20, 2021. Please note that the information on this and all pages is periodically reviewed and subject to change.
Citation: Hills, Patricia, and Abigael MacGibeny. "Harvest, c.1868 (Hills no. 13.3.14)." Eastman Johnson Catalogue Raisonné. www.eastmanjohnson.org/catalogue/entry.php?id=148 (accessed on May 2, 2024).