Self-Portrait mk52
1941
Oil on canvas on board
35.5x27.9cm
Albright-Knox Art Gallery,Buffalo
Horace pippin a roman woman using a plectrum on a form of lyre Painting ID:: 60134 new21/unknow artist-889267.jpg
a roman woman using a plectrum on a form of lyre mk270 a roman woman using a plectrum on a form of lyre
Horace pippin Music in Western Civilization. Painting ID:: 60135 new21/unknow artist-647896.jpg
Music in Western Civilization. mk270 a 16th century ltalian depiction of a lyre, the shape of which has come to serve as a universal symbol for music in western civilization.
Horace pippin john brown pa vag till sin avrattning Painting ID:: 67479 new23/Horace pippin-858885.jpg
1888-1946
was a self-taught African-American painter who worked in a naive style. The injustice of slavery and American segregation figure prominently in many of his works. He was born in West Chester, Pennsylvania, and grew up in Goshen, New York. There he attended segregated schools until he was 15, when he went to work to support his ailing mother.Pippin served in the 369th infantry in Europe during World War I, where he lost the use of his right arm. He said of his combat experience: His activity as a painter did not begin in earnest until 1930. One of his best-known paintings, his Self-portrait of 1941, shows him seated in front of an easel, cradling his brush in his right hand (he used his left arm to guide his injured right arm when painting). His painting of John Brown Going to his Hanging (1942) is in the collection of the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts in Philadelphia. Among Pippin's works are many genre paintings, such as the Domino Players (1943), in the Phillips Collection, Washington D.C., and several versions of Cabin in the Cotton.