Winslow Homer
United States, 1836-1910
Winslow Homer was born in Boston to an
old, established New England family. In
1849, Homer’s father sold his hardware
business and moved his family to the West
Coast to take part in the California Gold
Rush. The cost of this venture kept Homer
from attending Harvard, and at age 19 he
became an apprentice to a lithographer.
His career as a professional artist was
born.
Following his work at the lithographer’s
shop, Homer became a freelance draftsman,
specializing in woodblock engraving. From
his successes in developing the technique
of woodblock engraving, Homer was able to
move into the field of magazine illustration
with little difficulty, and he soon became
very well known. By the 1860s, he was contributing
regularly to Harper’s Weekly
magazine as an illustrator of events occurring
in the Civil War.
After the war, Homer traveled in Europe.
There he was influenced by the works of
French artists Édouard Manet and
Gustave Courbet.
By the 1880s, Homer had moved on to paintings
that were to become his trademark: those
that dealt with his great love for the sea.
He captured a turbulent sea in which a man
and boat could be engulfed in an instant,
as well as the calm beauty of a stream and
the relaxing calm of a warm day in the Caribbean.
Because he loved and captured the elemental
forces of nature, Homer is considered a
Realist. His unique talent enabled him—as
few others did before him and few have done
since—to express the reality of America.
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