The New Scholar

Engraver Alfred Jones American
After Francis William Edmonds American
Publisher American Art-Union, New York American

Not on view

As a mother delivers her son to school for the first time, the boy's apprehension is mirrored by the family dog sniffing the teacher's leg. The latter appears genial, but a switch partly hidden behind his back points to a strict disciplinarian. The print was published by the American Art-Union, a New York institution that boasted nearly nineteen thousand subscribers at its height in 1849–50. For an annual fee of five dollars, each member received a large, finely engraved, print and was entered in a lottery to win original artworks which were exhibited at the Art-Union's Free Gallery. Aimed at educating the public about contemporary American art, the group's distribution network reached every state. This contributed to the creation of a national market for landscapes, genre paintings, and small bronze sculptures. The system flourished for a limited period, however, with no lottery taking place in 1851, the year that the Art-Union issued this work as part of a set of small engravings titled "Gallery of American Art," No. I. In 1852–53, the institution was forced to dissolve.

The New Scholar, Alfred Jones (American, Liverpool, England 1819–1900 New York), Etching and engraving on steel

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