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George Bellows Forty two Kids
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George Bellows forty-two kids (nn03) 1907
Oil on canvas h107.6 x w153cm h42 3/8 x w60 1/4in Corcoran Gallery of Art Washington DC
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George Bellows Excavation at Night (mk43) 1907
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George Bellows The Circus mk146
1912
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George Bellows Excavation at Night mk151
1908
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George Bellows River Rats mk151
1906
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George Bellows Kids mk151
1906
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George Bellows Set-to mk212
1909
Oil on canvas
92.1x122.6cm
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George Bellows pennsylvania station excavation mk247
1907 to 08,oil on canvas,31.125x38.25 in,79x97 cm,brooklyn museum of art,brooklyn,ny,usa
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George Bellows Builders of Ships "Builders of Ships," oil on canvas, by the American artist George Bellows. 30 in. x 44 in. Courtesy of the Yale University Art Gallery, Yale University, New Haven, Conn.
cjr
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George Bellows Lady Jean oil on canvas, by the American artist George Wesley Bellows. 72 in. x 36 in. The portrait of 'Lady Jean' is that of Bellows' daughter Jean. Bequest of Stephen Carlton Clark, B.A. 1903. Courtesy of the Yale University Art Gallery, Yale University, New Haven, Conn.
Date 1924(1924)
cyf
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George Bellows Builders of Ships Builders of Ships," oil on canvas, by the American artist George Bellows. 30 in. x 44 in. Courtesy of the Yale University Art Gallery, Yale University, New Haven, Conn.
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George Bellows The Barricade Date
English: 1918
Medium
oil on canvas
Dimensions
48.125 x 83.5 in (122.2 x 212.1 cm)
TTD
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George Bellows The Lone Tenement 1909(1909)
Medium oil on canvas
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George Bellows
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1882-1925
Growing prestige as a painter brought changes in his life and work. Though he continued his earlier themes, Bellows also began to receive portrait commissions, as well as social invitations, from New York's wealthy elite. Additionally, he followed Henri's lead and began to summer in Maine, painting seascapes on Monhegan and Matinicus islands.
At the same time, the always socially conscious Bellows also associated with a group of radical artists and activists called "the Lyrical Left", who tended towards anarchism in their extreme advocacy of individual rights. He taught at the first Modern School in New York City (as did his mentor, Henri), and served on the editorial board of the socialist journal, The Masses, to which he contributed many drawings and prints beginning in 1911. However, he was often at odds with the other contributors because of his belief that artistic freedom should trump any ideological editorial policy. Bellows also notably dissented from this circle in his very public support of U.S. intervention in World War I. In 1918, he created a series of lithographs and paintings that graphically depicted the atrocities committed by Germany during its invasion of Belgium. Notable among these was The Germans Arrive, which was based on an actual account and gruesomely illustrated a German soldier restraining a Belgian teen whose hands had just been severed. However, his work was also highly critical of the domestic censorship and persecution of anti-war dissenters conducted by the U.S. government under the Espionage Act.
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