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Creator Name: Henri, Robert
Creator Nationality: North American; American
Creator Role: Artist
Creator Dates/Places: American, 1865-1929
Creator Name-CRT: Robert Henri
Title: The Masquerade Dress
View: Full View
Creation Start Date: 1911
Creation End Date: 1911
Creation Date: 1911
Object Type: Paintings
Materials and Techniques: oil on canvas
Dimensions: H. 76-1/2, W. 36-1/4 in. (194.2 x 92 cm)
AMICA Contributor: The Metropolitan Museum of Art
Owner Location: New York, New York, USA
ID Number: 58.157
Credit Line: Arthur Hoppock Hearn Fund, 1958
Rights: http://www.metmuseum.org/
Context: Robert Henri was one of the most influential artists and teachers in twentieth-century American art. Among his students and disciples were many artists who came to maturity between 1910 and 1930, including George Bellows, Rockwell Kent, Eugene Speicher, Patrick Henry Bruce, Glenn Coleman, Morgan Russell, Stuart Davis, and John Sloan. Henri's approach to realism was influenced by his studies at the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts with Thomas Anshutz, a pupil and an assistant of Thomas Eakins who took over the latter's classes after he was dismissed. Their disavowal of traditional subject matter derived from history, literature, and mythology and their tendency to analyze nature objectively shaped Henri's own philosophy. After three years of study in Europe, where he was impressed more by the work of Manet, Velázquez, and Hals than by late Impressionism, Henri returned to Philadelphia, where he met Sloan, William Glackens, George Luks, and Everett Shinn, all of whom were working as artist-reporters or illustrators at various Philadelphia newspapers. Their interaction - a merging of Henri's painterly technique with the keen observation and social focus of newspaper illustration - resulted in the artistic philosophy of this group. "The Eight," who espoused "art for life's sake," gravitated to New York at the beginning of the twentieth century, becoming embroiled in conflicts with the prevailing academic attitudes in painting, a struggle that coalesced in their famous exhibition at Macbeth Gallery in 1908. Henri's work was imbued with social awareness, and The Eight were, in general, especially attuned to the economic plight of urbanized society, with its influx of newly arrived immigrants struggling to survive. Although he painted a few street scenes and landscapes, it was in the closely observed, penetrating portraits of individuals that Henri excelled. One of his favorite models was his wife, whom he painted in the work shown here. Mrs. Henri, who posed for her husband often, was herself an artist, known for her graphic work and watercolors, which she exhibited under her maiden name, Marjorie Organ. The portrait demonstrates Henri's typical directness of presentation. His wife stands with one foot forward, one arm slightly extended, looking out of the canvas as if she were about to curtsy to the viewer. The elegance of her figure is emphasized by the verticality of the composition. There is nothing to look at but the subject, no interest in the background except as it serves to throw the figure into relief. Thanks to Henri's mastery of shorthand indications, the texture of the paint that represents the dress exactly simulates the material.
AMICA ID: MMA_.58.157
AMICA Library Year: 2000
Media Metadata Rights:
Copyright The Metropolitan Museum of Art
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