The Romany Girl

Painting

-

anonymous...

Name/Title

The Romany Girl

Entry/Object ID

1965.38

Type of Painting

Easel

Artwork Details

Medium

Oil on canvas, Oil, Canvas

Category

American Art, 1800 to 1945

Acquisition

Accession

1965.38

Source or Donor

Crocker Art Museum Purchase

Acquisition Method

Purchase

Credit Line

Crocker Art Museum Purchase

Notes

Crocker Art Museum Purchase

Made/Created

Artist

Robert Henri

Date made

n.d.

Time Period

19th Century, 20th Century

Place

Location

America, North America

Lexicon

Legacy Lexicon

Object Name

Web-Tag-People

Dimensions

Height

24 in

Width

20 in

Location

Category

Display

Category

Display

Category

TEST

Interpretative Labels

Label Type

Website Medium

Label

Oil on canvas

General Notes

Note Type

Historical Note

Note

In 1886, Robert Henri enrolled at the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts. Two years later, he traveled to Paris to continue his studies, but returned to Philadelphia in 1891 to become the leader of a group of artists that included John Sloan, Everett Shinn, William Glackens, and George Luks. Henri encouraged this group, all former illustrators for the Philadelphia Press, to apply their journalistic skills to the development of a style that could capture the vitality of the modern world. In 1900, Henri and his followers moved to New York City, where they began to paint the city's poorer inhabitants and lower-class neighborhoods. In their preference for these gritty urban scenes, Henri and his circle broke from the genteel traditions of the previous century and earned the appellation Ashcan School. Henri's and the other Ashcan artists' rejection of academic tradition and embrace of the everyday world alienated them from the leading art societies of the day. The group began to exhibit together as The Eight. Henri was particularly interested in portraiture and early in his career had studied paintings by Rembrandt and Frans Hals. The influences of both artists is apparent in Henri's portraits, which typically incorporate dark tonalities and a bravura handling of pigment. Many of Henri's portraits depict unknown children of various ethnicities and social classes, such as this Romany girl. By rendering childhood innocence, Henri offered his audience a chance to sympathize with his uncommon subjects and at the same time communicated his democratic view of art and humanity.