Selected Photographs – Art Institute of Chicago
November 24, 2009 by rusticroads
American Gothic - Grant Wood

American Gothic - Grant Wood

Today I’m going to upload a few photographs of paintings that I took at the Art Institute of Chicago last Sunday.  The first,  American Gothic, by Grant Wood, needs no further explanation.    To my surprise, I found the following huge statue of these folks just up Michigan Avenue from the museum:

American Gothic - Statue

American Gothic - Statue

 ”A 25-foot interpretation of Grant Wood’s famous (and often parodied) painting American Gothic sits at 401 Michigan Ave., just down the road from the original painting that hangs at the outstanding Chicago Institute of Art. The sculptor is J. Seward Johnson. It’s awesome in its incongruity: earnest farm folk among gleaming skyscrapers, the Midwest’s salt of the earth among the Midwest’s most sophisticated urban backdrop, humble farmers blown up to giant urban dwellers. “[Gunnar Johnson, eccentricroadside.blogspot.com, 07/28/2009]

Black Cross - New Mexico 1929, Georgia O'Keefe

Black Cross - New Mexico 1929, Georgia O'Keefe

“I saw the crosses so often — and often in unexpected places — like a thin dark veil of the Catholic church spread over the New Mexico landscape,” said Georgia O’Keeffe of the Southwestern territory near Taos, where she would eventually settle.

Paris Street; Rainy Day, 1877 -Gustave Caillebotte

Paris Street; Rainy Day, 1877 - Gustave Caillebotte

Caillebotte painted some 500 works in a style often more realistic than that of his Impressionist friends. The painter will illustrate himself particularly in views of Paris streets made from high balconies, in scenes of working life, natural landscapes of gardens and parks, and in nautical scenes.  His great concern for a realistic painting, his colored notes, and his treatment of light make him well known as a great Impressionist painter whose work is original and diverse.

Vincent van Gogh; Self-Portrait, 1887

Vincent van Gogh; Self-Portrait, 1887

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