The Metropolitan's Relationship with Eakins
Today considered a leading repository of works by Eakins, the Metropolitan Museum established a relationship with the artist during his lifetime. In 1881, Eakins donated The Chess Players (1876) to the Metropolitan, and it became the first gift by a living artist to enter the collection. Through subsequent purchases and gifts, the collection has grown to include some of Eakins's most significant paintings, watercolors, and photographs.
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More about the Artist
The son of a Philadelphia writing master and teacher of calligraphy, Thomas Eakins displayed artistic talentmost notably in mechanical drawingeven as a youth. Encouraged by his father to pursue a career as an artist, Eakins enrolled in classes at the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts and attended anatomy lectures and demonstrations at Philadelphia's Jefferson Medical College.
In 1866, he became one of the first American artists to seek serious professional training in Francea practice that would later become commonplacecontinuing his studies in the atelier of the noted historical and genre painter Jean-Léon Gérôme. Eakins also received instruction in sculpture and portraiture. Having completed his studies, and in ill health, he escaped the damp climate of Paris in the winter of 186970 to spend several months in Madrid and Seville, where he immersed himself in Spanish art before returning home.
Unlike many of his compatriots, who would seek their artistic inspiration in foreign lands, Eakins chose to document and memorialize the familiar. Settling in his parents' house in Philadelphia in 1870, he painted outdoor sporting scenes that included his male friends and meditative indoor scenes that featured his female friends and relatives. Even when an image appears to be merely a genre scene, it is rooted in Eakins's commitment to the specificity of portraiture, which would become his principal concern after 1886.
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Eakins's Subjects
Today Eakins is closely identified with his depictions of rowers on Philadelphia's Schuylkill River, such as the great oil painting of 1871, The Champion Single Sculls (Max Schmitt in a Single Scull), and the meticulous watercolor of 187374, John Biglin in a Single Scull (both from the Metropolitan Museum). But he also painted men hunting for waterfowl and fishingsuch as Starting Out After Rail (1874, Museum of Fine Arts, Boston) and Shad Fishing at Gloucester on the Delaware River (1881, Philadelphia Museum of Art)and playing baseball, as well as boxing.
The women Eakins painted were usually members of his family, friends, or pupils, and they were often shown in domestic settings. Two of his students served as models for The Pathetic Song (1881, The Metropolitan Museum of Art), which portrays a parlor concert and captures the moment at the end of a song. And family friend Weda Cook posed for one of his most ambitious and moving musical paintings, The Concert Singer (1891, Philadelphia Museum of Art). The artist's investigative approach required that Cook begin each of the more than eighty sittings by singing the same melody so that he could study the action of her vocal chords.
Eakins excelled at portraiture, but his insistence on repeated sittingshe orchestrated and scrupulously recorded every detail of pose, costume, and settingwas a process his subjects found tedious, despite the fact that the results were masterful and captured the sitter's essence. Potential patrons feared that Eakins's probing approach would ruthlessly reveal, rather than flatter; and even friends who agreed to pose as a favor to Eakins often declined to accept their portraits as gifts.
Eakins is also identified with medical portraits such as The Gross Clinic (1875, Jefferson Medical College of Thomas Jefferson University, Philadelphia) which shows the pioneering surgeon Dr. Samuel David Gross performing and commenting on surgery on a living patient. The public acclaim that Eakins hoped for when he completed his masterpiece did not materialize, although the work is now considered by many art historians to be the greatest American painting ever created.
Eakins's late portraits, such as The Thinker: Portrait of Louis N. Kenton (1900, The Metropolitan Museum of Art), capture the introspection of his subjects at the same time they seem to reflect his own melancholy. Simple and vigorous, The Thinker is a probing, intensely realized image of an individual as well as an archetypal portrayal of modern man in the first year of the new century, a fact that is prominently proclaimed by the date, 1900, inscribed at the corner of the canvas.
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Eakins and Photography
Beginning in the summer of 1880, Eakins turned his attention to photography. He saw photography as a modern medium thatin addition to anatomy and mechanical drawingshould be put to the service of painting. Likewise, he was deeply interested in its inherent artistic possibilities and poetics. He quickly mastered the new medium andurging his students to learn it alsointroduced the camera to the American art studio.
The subject matter in Eakins's photographsprimarily the human figure (both clothed and nude) and portraits of his family and friends, his students, and himselfechoes that of his paintings, making him the first American artist to integrate these two disparate media. In some instances, Eakins used photographic images diagnostically: by studying them, he hoped better to understand the human figure, details of human physiognomy, and gestures. But groundbreaking scholarship in the field of painting conservation now reveals how Eakins (using a magic lantern) employed photographic images to mark his canvases and create such complex multi-figure paintings as Mending the Net (1881, Philadelphia Museum of Art).
The challenges posed by the new technology and Eakins's solutions to them suggest that he also viewed photographs as discrete works of art. He was the only American painter in his day to make his own photographic enlargements on platinum papersa notable achievement for an amateur. Influenced by the noted photographer Eadweard Muybridge (18301904), Eakins also designed and constructed a special camera that made multiple exposures on a single plate, capturing the nuances of human musculature in motion.
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Eakins as a Teacher
From 1876 to 1886, Eakins was an instructor and then director of the school at the Pennsylvania Academy. His salary and a small income provided by his father allowed him to carry on his career with but few sales or portrait commissions.
Due in large part to Eakins's influence on the school's curriculumand his insistence that both male and female students study anatomy and conduct dissectionsthe Pennsylvania Academy became the most liberal and advanced art school in the United States in the early 1880s. His belief that artists needed to investigate the nude human figure challenged Philadelphia decorum and exacerbated his difficulties with the school's administration, however, and forced his resignation in 1886. Thereafter, Eakins held teaching postslecturing on anatomyin various schools in Philadelphia and New York.
A platinum print of Eakins's classroom at the Art Students' League (ca.1889, The Metropolitan Museum of Art) shows Eakins's unique talent for integrating photography and art instruction. In this rare glimpse of a life drawing class in session, the nude modela female, whom we see from behindreclines on a blanket. A male art student, sketchbook in hand, can be discerned in the shadows, drawing the same lithe figure Eakins records with his camera.
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Exhibition Publication
A catalogue published by the Philadelphia Museum of Art and Yale University Press accompanies the exhibition. The catalogue is available in hard cover and paperbound editions in the Metropolitan's bookshop and in the online Met Store.
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Educational Programs
The Metropolitan Museum has scheduled a variety of educational programs in conjunction with the exhibition, including lectures, gallery talks, and activities for teachers and families. Consult the online calendar for details.
An audio tour, part of the Metropolitan's Audio Guide program, is available for rental.
The Audio Guide program is sponsored by Bloomberg.
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Exhibition Organizers and Credits
The exhibition was organized at the Metropolitan by H. Barbara Weinberg, the Alice Pratt Brown Curator of American Paintings and Sculpture, and Jeff L. Rosenheim, assistant curator, Department of Photographs. Exhibition design was by Michael R. Langley, exhibition designer; graphics were by Sophia Geronimus, graphic designer; and lighting was by Zack Zanolli, lighting designer, all of the Museum's Design Department.
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Exhibition Venue
Prior to its showing at the Metropolitan Museum, the exhibition was on view at the Philadelphia Museum of Art and the Musée d'Orsay in Paris.
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