Feeding the Turkey

Eastman Johnson American
ca. 1872–80
Not on view
Although his oeuvre in pastel crayon includes no more than twenty pieces, it is nonetheless highly significant, not only because Johnson’s handling of the material was so skillful but also because he was one of the few American artists who used it during the mid-nineteenth century. Johnson began using pastel in 1847—making him practically unique among his colleagues—and may have come to regard pastel, which shared basic properties with the other drawing media he used so comfortably, as a reasonable way to add color to his work. This particular work is part of a series leading up to an oil painting of the same title. He probably used his daughter Ethel as his model.

Artwork Details

Object Information
  • Title: Feeding the Turkey
  • Artist: Eastman Johnson (American, Lovell, Maine 1824–1906 New York)
  • Date: ca. 1872–80
  • Culture: American
  • Medium: Pastel on wove paper, mounted to canvas on a wooden stretcher
  • Dimensions: 24 x 14 in. (61 x 35.6 cm)
  • Credit Line: Anonymous Gift, in memory of William Brown Cogswell, 1946
  • Object Number: 46.47
  • Curatorial Department: The American Wing

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Eastman Johnson - Feeding the Turkey - American - The Metropolitan Museum of Art