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American, 1831–1913
                        
                    
                    
                    
                    
                    
                    
                   
                    
                        
                    
                    
                        
                    
                        		
John George Brown was one of the most popular, and most collected, American artists of the late nineteenth century. He was particularly known for subjects like this one, depicting New York’s street children. Brown painted many versions of the “young bootblack,” and they were frequently purchased by middle-class, self-made businessmen who believed that success was dependent on entrepreneurship and personal initiative. What contemporaries saw as industriousness on the part of the child, we might view as indicative of the evils of child labor.
                    
                
            American, 1831–1913
Shine, Mister?
1905
                            Object Type:
                            Painting
                        
                    
                    
                    
                        
                            Creation Place:
                            North America, American
                        
                    
                    
                       
                            Dimensions:
                       
                        23 1/2 in. x 16 1/2 in. (59.69 cm x 41.91 cm)
                            Medium and Support:
                            Oil on canvas
                        
                    
					
                    
                        
                            Accession Number:
                            1985.0011
                        
                    
					
                            Credit Line:
                            Gift of Babette L. and Charles H. Wampold
                        
                    
					
					  
					
                    
                    
                        John George Brown was one of the most popular, and most collected, American artists of the late nineteenth century. He was particularly known for subjects like this one, depicting New York’s street children. Brown painted many versions of the “young bootblack,” and they were frequently purchased by middle-class, self-made businessmen who believed that success was dependent on entrepreneurship and personal initiative. What contemporaries saw as industriousness on the part of the child, we might view as indicative of the evils of child labor.
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