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Willard
Metcalf (1858-1925), Swollen Brook, 1923, oil on canvas,
29 1/4 x 33 1/4 inches
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WILLARD
METCALF
Willard Metcalf
preceded Ernest Lawson at the "Acadamie Julian." Lawson was
a painter committed to the Impressionist aesthetic and was a member
of the "Ashcan" School, a loosely organized group of American
artists working in the impressionist style.
Swollen Brook
typifies Metcalf's late work. He employs the device of a meandering
stream, drawing the eye back and forth across the picture plane towards
the foothills. The quick, short brush strokes convey a lush new growth
on the land, an illusion reinforced by the palette. The painting makes
reference to the French Impressionist style but is assuredly American.
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