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George Bellows
George Wesley Bellows (August 19, 1882 - January
8, 1925) was an American painter, known for his bold depictions
of urban life in New York City.
Bellows was born in Columbus, Ohio. He attended
the Ohio State University from 1901 until 1904, where he was encouraged
to become a professional baseball player because of his talent,
but lacked the interest. He worked as a commercial illustrator while
a student, and though he continued to accept magazine assignments
throughout his life, Bellows desired enough success as a painter
to avoid having to rely on illustration for income. He left OSU
in 1904 without graduating and moved to New York City to study art.
Bellows was soon a student of Robert Henri at the New York School
of Art, and became associated with Henri's "The Eight"
and the Ashcan School, a group of artists who advocated painting
contemporary American society in all its forms. By 1906, Bellows
was renting his own studio.
Bellows first achieved notice in 1908, when he
and other pupils of Henri organized an exhibition of mostly urban
studies. While many critics considered these to be crudely painted,
others found them welcomely audacious and a step beyond the work
of their teacher. His fame grew as he contributed to other nationally
recognized juried shows.
Cliff Dwellers (1913)
Oil on canvas, 40 1/4 x 42 1/8 in. (102.2 x 107 cm)
Los Angeles County Museum of ArtBellows' urban New York scenes depicted
the crudity and chaos of working-class people and neighborhoods,
and also satirized the upper classes. From 1907 through 1915, he
executed a series of paintings depicting New York City under snowfall.
Many art scholars believe these paintings were the main testing
ground in which Bellows developed his strong sense of light and
visual texture. These exhibited a stark contrast between the blue
and white expanses of snow and the rough and grimy surfaces of city
structures, and created an aesthetically ironic image of the equally
rough and grimy men struggling to clear away the nuisance of the
pure snow. However, Bellows' series of paintings portraying amateur
boxing matches were arguably his signature contribution to art history.
These paintings are characterized by dark atmospheres, through which
the bright, roughly lain brushstrokes of the human figures vividly
strike with a strong sense of motion and direction.
Gaining prestige as a painter brought some changes
to his work. Though he continued his earlier themes, he began to
additionally receive portrait commissions from those among New York's
wealthy elite, from whom he now often received social invitations,
and to paint relatively placid Maine seascapes.
At the same time, the always socially conscious
Bellows also associated with a group of radical artists and activists
called "the Lyrical Left", who tended towards anarchism
in their extreme advocacy of individual rights. He taught at the
first Modern School in New York City (as did his mentor, Henri),
and served on the editorial board of the socialist journal, The
Masses, to which he contributed many drawings and prints beginning
in 1911. However, he was often at odds with the other contributors
because of his belief that artistic freedom should trump any ideological
editorial policy. Bellows also notably dissented from this circle
in his very public support of U.S. intervention in World War I.
In 1918, he created a series of lithographs and paintings that graphically
depicted the atrocities committed by Germany during its invasion
of Belgium. Notable among these was The Germans Arrive, which was
based on an actual account and gruesomely illustrated a German soldier
restraining a Belgian teen whose hands had just been severed. However,
his work was also highly critical of the domestic censorship and
persecution of anti-war dissenters conducted by the U.S. government
under the Espionage Act.
Both Members of This Club (1909)
Oil on canvas, 45 1/4 x 63 1/8 in. (115 x 160.5 cm)
National Gallery of Art
In addition to painting, Bellows made significant contributions
to lithography, helping to expand the use of the medium as a fine
art in the U.S. He installed a lithography press in his studio in
1916, and between 1921 and 1924 he collaborated with master printer
Bolton Brown on more than a hundred images. Bellows also illustrated
numerous books in his later career, including several by H.G. Wells.
Bellows moved from New York in 1919 to teach at
the Chicago Art Institute. He died on January 8, 1925 of peritonitis,
after failing to tend to a ruptured appendix. He was survived by
his wife, Emma, and two daughters, Anne and Jean.
Paintings by George Bellows are in the collections
of many major American art museums, including the National Gallery
of Art in Washington, DC, and the Whitney and the Museum of Modern
Art in New York. The Columbus Museum of Art in Bellows' hometown
also has a sizeable collection of both his portraits and New York
street scenes.
The paintings are the excellent portrayal of the events and scenes
that we see around us. The painters are the best cameras of the
world. They reproduce many different types of pictures. They even
draw imaginary pictures that do not exist in this world. We tend
to use both thinned oil paints and dense oil paints. Masterpieces
can be dyed more than once, but each time it may be different from
the existing paintings.h
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