CHARLES SCHREYVOGEL (1861-1912)
CHARLES SCHREYVOGEL (1861-1912)
CHARLES SCHREYVOGEL (1861-1912)
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CHARLES SCHREYVOGEL (1861-1912)
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CHARLES SCHREYVOGEL (1861-1912)

Pickets

细节
CHARLES SCHREYVOGEL (1861-1912)
Pickets
signed 'Chas Schreyvogel. ANA.' (lower right)—dated 'Copyright/1907.' (lower left)
oil on canvas
16 ½ x 20 ½ in. (41.9 x 52.1 cm.)
Painted in 1907.
来源
Museum of Western Art, Denver, Colorado, by 1983.
Private collection, California.
Coeur d’Alene Art Auction, Hayden, Idaho, 21 July 2012, lot 163.
Acquired by the present owner from the above.
出版
J.D. Horan, The Life and Art of Charles Schreyvogel: Painter-Historian of the Indian-Fighting Army of the American West, New York, 1969, p. 56, illustrated.
W. Foxley, Frontier Spirit: Catalogue of the Collection of the Museum of Western Art, Denver, Colorado, 1983, p. 109, pl. 75, illustrated (as The Picketts).
A.C. Braddock, "Shooting the Beholder: Charles Schreyvogel and the Spectacle of Gun Vision," American Art, vol. XX, no. 1, Spring 2006, p. 46, fig. 12, illustrated.

荣誉呈献

Tylee Abbott
Tylee Abbott Senior Vice President, Head of American Art

拍品专文

"The most visually engaging works by Schreyvogel," Alan C. Braddock declares, "are those that show figures with eyes and firearms aimed directly at us, targeting the beholder...Although the guns do not actually fire, shooting seems imminent, to say the least, creating a sense of prolepsis or anticipation. Breaking through the Line [1903, Gilcrease Museum, Tulsa, Oklahoma] contains just one of many examples of this motif in Schreyvogel’s oeuvre. Another can be found in The Pickets (fig. 12), which shows a trooper in the foreground with pistol and eyes trained on the viewer...Our glance at the picture, into the gaze of that soldier and his pointed gun barrel, fictively seals our fate." ("Shooting the Beholder: Charles Schreyvogel and the Spectacle of Gun Vision," American Art, vol. XX, no. 1, Spring 2006, p. 46)

更多来自 Icons of the American West: The William I. Koch Collection

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