Anne Goldthwaite (aka Anne Wilson Goldthwaite)
American, 1869–1944
Anne Goldthwaite spent most of her professional career as an artist in New York City, but many summers she made the trip to Alabama to visit her family in Montgomery. She was known to spend much of her free time while she was in the South making sketches and paintings, and she came to be known in New York art circles as a painter of Southern subjects.
"Southern Pines" is an etching made early during the early period of her work as a printmaker. She made more than 300 prints (both etchings and lithographs) between the years 1912 and 1942, depicting a tremendous range of subjects—from landscapes such as this one, to portraits, genre scenes, animal subjects, and many others. This work, sometimes also known as "Alabama Pines," shows a stand of pine trees. Large numbers of acres in central and south Alabama came to be devoted to the cultivation of pines, which were harvested for paper production.
American, 1869–1944
Southern Pines
about 1915
Object Type:
Print
Creation Place:
North America, American, Alabama
Dimensions:
5 15/16 in. x 8 7/8 in. (15.08 cm x 22.54 cm)
Medium and Support:
Etching on paper
Accession Number:
1982.0016.0134
Credit Line:
Gift of Adelyn D. Breeskin
Anne Goldthwaite spent most of her professional career as an artist in New York City, but many summers she made the trip to Alabama to visit her family in Montgomery. She was known to spend much of her free time while she was in the South making sketches and paintings, and she came to be known in New York art circles as a painter of Southern subjects.
"Southern Pines" is an etching made early during the early period of her work as a printmaker. She made more than 300 prints (both etchings and lithographs) between the years 1912 and 1942, depicting a tremendous range of subjects—from landscapes such as this one, to portraits, genre scenes, animal subjects, and many others. This work, sometimes also known as "Alabama Pines," shows a stand of pine trees. Large numbers of acres in central and south Alabama came to be devoted to the cultivation of pines, which were harvested for paper production.
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