The Card Players

Various artists/makers

Not on view

In a work reiminscent of Dutch genre paintings, two men play cards at a table as a third arbitrates. At left, a Black servant seated next to a stove clasps his hands. 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 members in every state. This contributed to the creation of a national market for landscapes and genre paintings. 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."

The Card Players, Charles Burt (American (born Scotland), Edinburgh ca. 1823–1892 Brooklyn, New York), Etching and engraving on steel

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