Lambs, Nantucket by Eastman Johnson http://www.nga.gov/artworks/157924-lambs-nantucket
Accession 2012.89.3 Artwork history & notes Artwork History Provenance (Hirsch & Adler
Accession 2012.89.3 Artwork history & notes Artwork History Provenance (Hirsch & Adler
possibly sold to James Brown [1791-1877], New York.[2] Private collection; (Hirschl & Adler
Private collection, Boston; sold by October 1965 to (Hirschl and Adler Galleries,
Voshell, Jr., Baltimore; (sale, Phillips, New York, 17 May 1982, no. 394); (Hirschl & Adler
Information on this painting can be found in the Gallery publication American Paintings of the Eighteenth Century , pages 30-34, which is available as a free PDF https://www.nga.gov/content/dam/ngaweb/research/publications/pdfs/american-paintings-18th-century.pdf
Boston, 1910-1949. 1975 American Portraits by John Singleton Copley, Hirschl & Adler
Heade offered viewers an intimate glimpse into the exotic recesses of nature’s secret garden. Lichen covers dead branches;
Weschler & Son, Washington, D.C., 21-23 May 1982, 3rd day, no. 1316);[1] (Hirschl & Adler
Childe Hassam was a regular visitor to the Isles of Shoals, nine small, rocky, treeless islands off the New Hampshire coast. His acquaintance with the islands was due to his poet friend Celia Thaxter, whose house on Appledore Island was a summer mecca for writers, painters, illustrators, musicians, and other artistic visitors.
Garner Tilney, 1925-1957; Marie Tilney Inge, Mobile, Alabama, 1957-1965; (Hirschl & Adler
Twombly was a reclusive, quasi-mythic figure of contemporary art. Born in Lexington, Virginia, the artist spent his early career in New York before moving to Italy in 1957, where he lived until his death in 2011.
Provenance Karsten Greve, Cologne, by 1982; purchased July 1985 by (Hirschl & Adler
Associated Names Mellon, Paul Exhibition History 1984 Rackstraw Downes, Hirschl & Adler
Charles Sheeler was a master of both painting and photography, and his work in one medium influenced and shaped his work in the other.[1] In 1927, he was commissioned to photograph the Ford Motor Company’s new River Rouge Plant near Detroit. Then the world’s largest industrial complex, employing more than 75,000 workers, the plant produced Ford’s Model A, successor to the famed Model T.
Ford House, Detroit; (sale, Sotheby’s, New York, 2 June 1983, no. 201); (Hirshl & Adler