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National Gallery of Art - EXHIBITIONS

image: George de Forest Brush: The Indian Paintings; September 14, 2008 to January 4, 2009

Related Resources

Exhibition Feature
(Download Flash player)

Exhibition Catalogue Introduction
In Choosing Indians As Subjects...
by Nancy K. Anderson
(PDF 248K)
(Download Acrobat Reader)

Works by
George de Forest Brush
in the Gallery's Collection

Attend a Concert

Attend a
Teacher Workshop

Attend the
Wyeth Foundation for American Art Conference
Images of the American Indian, 1600–2000

NGA Backstory: George de Forest Brush, Part 1: The Advent of the Indian Paintings
Step behind the scenes of a world-class museum with host Barbara Tempchin and Nancy Anderson, curator of American and British paintings, National Gallery of Art
Image: RSS Listen | iTunes | RSS (7:06 mins.)

George de Forest Brush, Part 2: Tradition and Modernity
Image: RSS Listen | iTunes | RSS (6:52 mins.)

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Exhibition catalogue

View Related Collection Tour
Homer and Eakins: American Painters in the Late 1800s

Explore
Themes in American Art

View Related Exhibition Features
Winslow Homer
Thomas Moran
Frederic Remington

Press Materials

Image: George de Forest Brush,  An Aztec Sculptor, 1887 Combining extraordinary technical skills acquired in Jean-Léon Gérôme’s studio in Paris with firsthand experience living among the Arapahoe, Shoshone, and Crow in Wyoming and Montana, George de Forest Brush (1854/1855–1941) created an important series of paintings of American Indians much celebrated by his contemporaries but rarely seen since. Completed during the 1880s, many of these works were quickly acquired by major American collectors and have remained in private hands through several generations. Of the twenty featured in this exhibition, several have only recently come to light. These stunningly beautiful paintings are studio compositions: complex meditations on the advent of modernism in which the Indian serves as metaphor. The accompanying catalogue, incorporating new research, is the first scholarly study of this series.

Organization: Organized by the National Gallery of Art, Washington, in association with the Seattle Art Museum.

Schedule: National Gallery of Art, September 14, 2008–January 4, 2009; Seattle Art Museum, February 26–May 24, 2009

Passes: Passes are not required for this exhibition.

The exhibition is on view in the East Building, Ground Floor