Word: homering
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After the war, Homer started to paint women--not the nudes of classical European painting, but young working women. The MFA show has over 50 canvases devoted to women, in various scenes: at work, playing croquet, or simple portraits. In his "Morning Bell," a red-and-white clad woman walks to her factory job; in the background other women are doing farm chores. This shows the transition from America's agrarian past to the post-War industrial economy; Homer's eye is focused on the trends in the lives of average citizens...
...Most of Homer's paintings are very bright; works like "Eagle Head, Manchester, Massachusetts," "Snap the Whip," "Breezing Up (A Fair Wind)," and "Boys in the Pasture" show Homer's dexterity in using color to capture the mood of the scene. In "Boys in the Pasture," Homer's scene of children at play expresses a hope for the future, while also stirring feelings of nostalgia for the happy and innocent time before...
...Homer also spent many years painting the progress of the freed slaves in their new status. "The Carnival" shows a young black man dressing up in a colorful, festive outfit for a carnival in his small town, dramatizing the inability of the freed slaves to blend into American society. "Sunday Morning in Virginia," an inspirational scene of newly literate children reading to their grandmother, is a hopeful comment on the power that literacy gave to the freed slaves in the South...
...period of his life, Homer started to paint scenes from the small fishing town where he lived. This phase produced some of his famous seascapes, such as "The Fog Warning," which shows a fisherman riding a mountainous wave, his head turned to listen to the foghorn. This painting, and other late works like "The Fox Hunt," emphasize the weakness of man when compared to America's majestic natural environment...
...exhibit reveals, above all, the variety of Homer's work, both of subject matter and medium. No matter what your taste in painting may be--nature scenes, nostalgic images of childhood, or documents of war--the MFA's show has something to please...