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American, 1824–1906
                        
                    
                    
                    
                    
                    
                    
                   
                    
                        
                    
                    
                        
                    
                        
   								
One of the most cosmopolitan and sought-after painters of his age, Eastman Johnson gained recognition through a series of charming, seemingly spontaneous images of American rural life, executed in a sophisticated, highly controlled manner. Johnson was part of the generation that followed William Sidney Mount as a genre painter in the late nineteenth century. He trained in Dusseldorf, and subsequently in Holland. During and after the Civil War Johnson painted a series of paintings of women and young children in decorative settings. In 1871, he built a summer home on Nantucket Island, and he began painting there out of doors, capturing the shimmering light and atmosphere. After the Civil War, children were often seen as innocents who were at home in and allied with nature, their characters yet unaffected by the increasing complexities of social conformity. They were viewed as the hope for the future of the nation and as embodiments of the desire for peace and prosperity following a nationally divisive conflict. The death of a large number of the nation’s young men in war had created a generational displacement for many young women of every class, who were left with fewer prospects for marriage and traditional roles of domesticity. This young girl’s quiet contemplation could have easily suggested to a contemporary audience her knowledge of the uncertainty of her future.
                    
                
            American, 1824–1906
Girl in Landscape with Two Lambs
1875
                            Object Type:
                            Painting
                        
                    
                    
                    
                        
                            Creation Place:
                            North America, American, Massachusetts
                        
                    
                    
                       
                            Dimensions:
                       
                        26 1/4 in. x 21 1/8 in. (66.68 cm x 53.66 cm)
                            Medium and Support:
                            Oil on fiberboard
                        
                    
					
                    
                        
                            Accession Number:
                            2011.0004.0001
                        
                    
					
                            Credit Line:
                            Gift of the Ida Belle Young Art Acquisition Fund
                        
                    
					
					
          			
      				
      				
            		Currently On View
 
            		
          			         
          			  
					
                    
                    
                        One of the most cosmopolitan and sought-after painters of his age, Eastman Johnson gained recognition through a series of charming, seemingly spontaneous images of American rural life, executed in a sophisticated, highly controlled manner. Johnson was part of the generation that followed William Sidney Mount as a genre painter in the late nineteenth century. He trained in Dusseldorf, and subsequently in Holland. During and after the Civil War Johnson painted a series of paintings of women and young children in decorative settings. In 1871, he built a summer home on Nantucket Island, and he began painting there out of doors, capturing the shimmering light and atmosphere. After the Civil War, children were often seen as innocents who were at home in and allied with nature, their characters yet unaffected by the increasing complexities of social conformity. They were viewed as the hope for the future of the nation and as embodiments of the desire for peace and prosperity following a nationally divisive conflict. The death of a large number of the nation’s young men in war had created a generational displacement for many young women of every class, who were left with fewer prospects for marriage and traditional roles of domesticity. This young girl’s quiet contemplation could have easily suggested to a contemporary audience her knowledge of the uncertainty of her future.
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