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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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36.0 Uncategorized Paintings

Works in the Eastman Johnson Catalogue Raisonné are organized into themes based on medium, locale (United States or Europe), and subject matter. Portraits made in the United States are further categorized by when Johnson made them: early (before he went to Europe in 1849) and late (after he returned to the United States in 1855). Uncategorized paintings are paintings for which all of these details are unknown. Either the subject matter indicated by the title is ambiguous (for example, “An Arrangement in Black and White”) or the subject matter is clear (for example, A Boy in a Torn Straw Hat), but it is unknown when and/or where Johnson made the work. In some cases it is not even certain but deduced from the available information that the works are paintings rather than drawings. Future research may enable the works in this theme to be identified more specifically.

There are also paintings in our research records that are not categorized and included in the catalogue raisonné, because they have not been proven to be unique works. They may be the same as paintings already included in the EJCR with different titles. In those cases, we add information from the not-included work (title, provenance, etc.) to the entry for the included work as “possibly.” We will add catalogue entries for those works in the future if research proves them to be unique. —AM

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Hills no. 36.0.25
Maid of Venice
c.1877
Oil
[dimensions unknown]
Description / Remarks

MacGibeny, 2021: From an exhibition review in the Chicago Daily Tribune, September 23, 1877, which refers to her "stippled head," we can surmise that Maid of Venice depicts a female head or bust-length figure. However, without an image and/or more information, we do not know whether Johnson painted it in Europe or America, whether the female is an adolescent girl or a woman, or whether she even might be a literary subject. 

Provenance
Present whereabouts unknown
Exhibitions
1877 Chicago Inter-State
Chicago Inter-State Industrial Exposition, Chicago, 1877. (Exhibition catalogue: Chicago Inter-State 1877), no. 260, as Maid of Venice.
References
Chicago Daily Tribune 1877
"The Exposition; Oil Pictures in Gallery B." The Chicago Daily Tribune, September 23, 1877, p. 12, as Maid of Venice, "The more prominent figure pieces of the room are…Eastman Johnson's figure of a young woman busily thinking [A Day Dream] and the stippled head of the Maid of Venice…"
Chicago Inter-State 1877
Catalogue of the Paintings in the Art Gallery of the Inter-State Industrial Exposition of Chicago. Chicago: Rand, McNally & Co., 1877. Exhibition catalogue (1877 Chicago Inter-State), p. 12, no. 260, as Maid of Venice.
Record last updated March 22, 2022. Please note that the information on this and all pages is periodically reviewed and subject to change.
Citation: Hills, Patricia, and Abigael MacGibeny. "Maid of Venice, c.1877 (Hills no. 36.0.25)." Eastman Johnson Catalogue Raisonné. www.eastmanjohnson.org/catalogue/entry.php?id=1775 (accessed on May 7, 2024).