Art

To love a painting is to feel that this presence is… not an object but a voice.

~ Andre Malraux ~

ncarolina1 136 - Copy

 A Tough Story

by

John George Brown

 

The children’s faces, in this work, instantly drew me in, and I began to imagine the tale being told to them, that so intently held them captivated; while admiring Mr. Brown’s ability to so beautifully capture his subject.

The accompanying placard states:

“In the 1880’s New York swarmed with the children of the desperate poor. However, in such paintings as A Tough Story, the squalor and viciousness of urban poverty are ignored.  Instead, the artist invents a sentimental fiction.  His young bootblacks are poor but industrious.  They elicit not our concern for their plight but our admiration for their pluck.  Would we regard them differently if the boys were grown men?  The artist’s plain, craftsman like realism only enhances the credibility of the scene.  The name Pat, carved into one boy’s blacking box, identifies the lad as an Irish immigrant.  Though dressed in rags, the boys are well scrubbed and well fed.  However, look at their eyes: the artist is too honest to disguise the weariness.”

 

Art can never exist without naked beauty displaced.

~ William Blake ~

 

 

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.




Art


Copy Protected by Chetan's WP-Copyprotect.