The Artist’s Wife and his Setter Dog by Thomas Eakins

Thomas_eakins_artists_wife_setter_dog

The Artist’s Wife and His Setter Dog by Thomas Eakins, ca. 1884-89

Dallas Art News reports:

The Amon Carter Museum has been loaned two American masterpieces from the Metroploltian Museum of Art in New York. The paintings are The Artist’s Wife and His Setter Dog (1884-89) by Thomas Eakins (1844-1916) and Lydia Crocheting in the Garden at Marly (1880) by Mary Cassatt (1844-1926). The paintings will be on view at the Amon Carter Museum through January, 25, 2010.“Both
are intimate portraits of the artists’ loved ones, although the artists
approached their subjects quite differently,” says Rebecca Lawton,
curator of paintings and sculpture at the Amon Carter Museum. “Eakins
depicts his wife and setter Harry with an uncompromising realism, while
Cassatt portrays her ailing sister Lydia with the delicacy and
directness of the Impressionists’ brushstroke.”

While these two paintings are in Fort Worth, the Carter has in return loaned two of its own masterpieces to the Met, Swimming (1895) by Thomas Eakins and Idle Hours
(ca. 1894) by William Merritt Chase. Both paintings are in the Met’s
exhibition American Stories: Paintings of Everyday Life, 1765–1915.

The Amon Carter will host free gallery talks about the Eakins and Cassatt paintings on November 12 at 6 p.m.

Lovely.

Comments

2 responses to “The Artist’s Wife and his Setter Dog by Thomas Eakins”

  1. WendyB Avatar

    Is it me or does that dog look positively GIANT compared with the woman?

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