#george caleb bingham
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The Jolly Flatboatmen
Artist: George Caleb Bingham (American, 1811-1879)
Date: 1846
Medium: Oil on canvas
Collection: National Gallery of Art, Washington, DC, United States
Description
George Caleb Bingham was one of the most important American painters of genre subjects in the mid-19th century. His series of scenes of life and work on the Missouri and Mississippi Rivers established his reputation in his own day and are today recognized as his finest creations. The Jolly Flatboatmen, along with Fur Traders Descending the Missouri (1845, Metropolitan Museum of Art), are the masterpieces of Bingham’s river pictures and icons of American art. In 1847, the American Art-Union, which had purchased The Jolly Flatboatmen directly from the artist, produced a large mezzotint of it that was distributed to its members (approximately 10,000) throughout the country, immediately making it one of the best-known works of art of its era. It depicts a group of men who, after accomplishing the hard work of rowing their flatboat upstream and loading it with cargo, are now relaxing and enjoying music and dancing. Bingham’s careful attention to detail is everywhere evident - a raccoon pelt hanging from a nail; a coil of rope; a turkey, which sticks its head out between the slats of the crate below the dancing man; a blue shirt hanging to dry. The composition is at once dynamic - the dancing man and the musicians - and elegantly stable in the way Bingham arranged the figures to form an isosceles triangle. The painting survives in superb condition, with its subtle brushwork, soft colors, and precise drawing intact.
#painting#oil on canvas#the jolly flatboatmen#river#american culture#flatboat#cargo#dancing#raccoon pelt#coil of rope#turkey#blue shirt#dancing man#musicians#blue horizon#trees#oil painting#artwork#fine art#george caleb bingham#american painter#19th century painting#american art#national gallery of art
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George Caleb Bingham, Fur Traders Descending the Missouri, 1845, oil/canvas (Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York)
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George Caleb Bingham (American, 1811-1879)
Fur Traders Descending the Missouri
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I saw my favorite painting ever in person today and learned something very important: the baby fox/bear cub is BLEPPING!!!!
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Most Famous Contemporary Artists
2/8/2024 ♦ Framed Poster Print ♦ Canvas Print ♦ Metal Print ♦ Acrylic Print ♦ Wood Prints 🌐 Worldwide shipping
#will barnet#romare bearden#winslow homer#abbott fuller graves#abbott handerson thayer#alfred thompson bricher#childe hassam#edward hicks#frederic sackrider remington#george caleb bingham#george wesley bellows#grant wood#henry ossawa tanner#horace pippin#james abbott mcNeill whistler#jasper johns#john singer sargent#man ray#maurice brazil prendergast#maxfield parrish
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George Caleb Bingham, "Landscape with fisherman", c.1840.
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George Caleb Bingham, Fur Traders Descending the Missouri, 1845 x
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Boatmen on the Missouri (1846) by George Caleb Bingham
#art#art history#artwork#culture#history#museums#painting#museum#vintage#american art#romanticism#genre painting
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hello! i’m looking into adopted yet another 19th century man. i’ve owned several others, and am looking for something unique. are there any unique and peculiar breeds you recommend?
Sure! These heritage and unique 19th century men may not be for everyone, but I want them to get more love.
French soldier left behind on the field of battle during the 1870 Franco-Prussian War.

Poor sweetheart!! True story: the model for this 1872 painting, real French soldier Théodore Larran, met the artist Émile Betsellère many times because Betsellère was so touched by his story. Absolutely the type of 19th century man you want to rescue and love.
A jolly flatboatman.

From The Jolly Flatboatmen by artist George Caleb Bingham, 1846.
A good 19th century man doesn't have to be wealthy or formal, as these charming working class fellows attest. Perfect for the aficionado of lively, active 19th century men.

British Army 41st Regiment of Foot Soldier, c. 1800-1815.
Who doesn't have "a passion for a scarlet coat," as Jonathan Swift phrased it! Your soldier needs a lot of exercise and structure, but he's not picky about his food or bedding. Comes with his own blanket and water bottle! He's a lover, he's a fighter, I recommend delousing him before you bring him into your home.
Cossack Trowsers King.

Strutting his stuff in 1827, he has an insouciant attitude and a bold, fashion-forward look. You may want to address the fact that he's also a major source of air pollution.
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The Painter's Triumph
Artist: William Sidney Mount (American, 1807-1868)
Date: 1838
Medium: Oil on wood
Collection: Philadelphia Academy of Fine Arts, Philadelphia, PA, United States
Description
One of the greatest of all American genre painters - indeed, with George Caleb Bingham, the best known - the Long Island-based William Sidney Mount painted affectionately humorous depictions of everyday life as well as subtler explorations of political, class, and even racial issues facing the young country. Both levels are at work in "The Painter's Triumph," painted when the artist was thirty-one. Marked by his characteristic warm, golden tonality, Mount depicted himself amazing a spectator with the magic of mimesis. If Mount's characterization of the gap-toothed, awestruck farmer is comical, he also pokes fun at himself. The artist's dramatic expression, showman-like pose and agitated hair may spoof the artistic personality. Meanwhile, the drawing tacked to the wall of a bust of the "Apollo Belvedere" - one of the exemplars of antique art - alludes to the lofty ideals that Mount would have learned at the recently founded National Academy of Design. But have those ideals been shunted into a corner or do they still act as an inspiration? Is the painter's triumph the power of art to reach the masses or is it an ironic commentary on what the public wants? It is a measure of Mount's accomplishment that the viewer may agree with both interpretations.
#painting#genre art#fine art#oil painting#painter's studio#men#easel#canvas#humor#american genre painter#chair#stool#painting palette#standing#william sidney mount#american painter#american culture#19th century painting#american art#artwork
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𝘙𝘢𝘧𝘵𝘴𝘮𝘦𝘯 𝘗𝘭𝘢𝘺𝘪𝘯𝘨 𝘊𝘢𝘳𝘥𝘴 by George Caleb Bingham, 1847, Saint Louis Art Museum
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Holidays 3.20
Holidays
Alien Abduction Day
American Diabetes Association Alert Day
Atheist Pride Day [also 6.20]
Bibliomania Day
Big Bird Day
Chicka Chicka Boom Boom Day
Culture Day and Creative Intelligentsia Day (Tajikistan)
Dibber Day (French Republic)
Dogs in Yellow Day
Durham Day (UK)
Extraterrestrial Abductions Day
Festival of Extraterrestrial Abductions
French Language Day (a.k.a. International Francophonie Day; UN)
Ghode Jatra (Horse Festival; Nepal)
Global Message Makes Me Happy & Healthy Day
Great British Spring Clean Day (UK)
Hufflepuff Pride Day
International Astrology Day
International Day of Happiness (UN)
International Francophonie Day
Kiss Your Fiancé Day
Lajos Kossuth Day (Hungary)
Legba Zaou (Haiti)
Li-Fraumeni Syndrome Awareness Day
Macaron Day NYC
Mesopotamian/Sumerian Grain Festival (Honoring Ashnan)
Minion Day (Japan)
Mister Rogers Day
National Arts Advocacy Day
National Backyard Bird Photography Day
National Cherry Blossom Festival begins (Washington DC)
National Day of Italian Universities Day (Italy)
National Native HIV/AIDS Awareness Day
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Pigeons Return to City-County Building (Ft. Wayne, Indiana)
P320 Day
Smile Rejuvenation Day
Very Hungary Caterpillar Day
Won't You Be My Neighbor? Day
Won’t You Wear a Sweater Day
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World Sparrow Day
Zipper Day
Food & Drink Celebrations
Bock Beer Day (New York) [also 2nd Monday]
Crawfish Cravers Awareness Day
Macaron Day
National Ravioli Day
World Flour Day
3rd Wednesday in March
Engineer’s Day (Belgium; Netherlands) [3rd Wednesday]
Kick Butts Day [3rd Wednesday]
National Carry Out Day (a.k.a. Carry Out Wednesday) [3rd Wednesday]
National Dietician’s Day (Canada) [3rd Wednesday]
National SBDC Day [3rd Wednesday]
Small Business Development Day [3rd Wednesday]
Independence & Related Days
Blackland (a.k.a. Kingdom of Blackland; Declared; 2015) [unrecognized]
Conzorica (a.k.a. Federal Republics of Conzorica; Declared; 2014)
Kirkuk Liberation Day (Iraqi Kurdistan)
Otango Province Anniversary (New Zealand)
Qootärlænt (Declared; 2008) [unrecognized]
Rezaxia (Declared; 2020) [unrecognized]
Tunisia (from France, 1956)
New Year’s Days
Baha’i New Year
Nowruz (New Year) [Day 1, Around Spring Equinox] (a.k.a. ...
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Norooz (Iran)
Novruz Bairam (a.k.a. Persian New Year; Azerbaijan)
Nowrūz (Persian, Gilaki, Kurdish, Zoroastrians; California)
Rosicrucian New Year
Festivals Beginning March 20, 2024
Jazz & Rhythms Festival (San Cristóbal de las Casas, Mexico) [thru 3.24]
Melbourne International Flower & Garden Show (Melbourne, Australia) [thru 3.24]
National Cherry Blossom Festival (Washington, DC) [thru 4.14]
Trans-Siberian Art Festival (Novosibirsk, Russia) [thru 4.7]
Feast Days
Alexandra (Christian; Saint)
Apple Magic Day (For Norse Goddess Idunn; Starza Pagan Book of Days)
Big Bird (Muppetism)
Blessed John of Parma (Christian; Saint)
Clement of Ireland (Christian; Saint)
Cuthbert of Lindisfarne (Christian; Saint) [maltsters]
Day Sacred to the Goddess Fortuna, the Morrigan, the Norns, the Three Fates, and the Three Mothers (Lakshmi, Parvati, and Sarasvati)
Edward Poynter (Artology)
Extraterrestrial Abductions Day (Pastafarian)
Feast of the Supreme Ritual (Thelema)
Festival For Driving Out All Evils (Inca)
Festival of Isis (Ancient Egypt)
George Caleb Bingham (Artology)
Henrik Ibsen (Writerism)
Herbert of Derwentwater (Christian; Saint)
John Lavery (Artology)
John of Nepomuk (Christian; Saint)
Józef Bilczewski (Christian; Saint)
María Josefa Sancho de Guerra (Christian; Saint)
Martin of Braga (Christian; Saint)
The Martyrs of Mar Saba (Christian; Martyrs)
Michele Carcano (Christian; Saint)
Philo of Alexandria (Positivist; Saint)
Photina and Her Companions (Christian; Martyrs)
Quinquatria, Day 2: Wrestling Day (Pagan)
Spring Harvest Festival (Ancient Egypt; Everyday Wicca)
Wulfram (Christian; Saint)
Xena Day (Church of the SubGenius; Saint)
Zagmuk (Festival celebrating the Resurrection of Marduk)
Lucky & Unlucky Days
Prime Number Day: 79 [22 of 72]
Shakku (赤口 Japan) [Bad luck all day, except at noon.]
Very Unlucky Day (Grafton’s Manual of 1565) [17 of 60]
Premieres
After Hours, by The Weekend (Album; 2020)
Armchair Apocrypha, by Andrew Bird (Album; 2007)
Avalanche is Better None or Snows You Old Man (Rocky & Bullwinkle Cartoon, S1, Ep. 33; 1960)
Back Off Boogaloo, recorded by Ringo Starr (Song; 1972)
Basic Instinct (Film; 1992)
Below Zero Heroes or I Only Have Ice for You (Rocky & Bullwinkle Cartoon, S1, Ep. 34; 1960)
The Book of Thoth (Egyptian Tarot), by Aleister Crowley (Tarot Book; 1944)
Bosko’s Easter Eggs (Happy Harmonies Cartoon; 1937)
Both Sides Now, by Joni Mitchell (Album; 2000)
Cannibal Capers (Disney Silly Symphony Cartoon; 1930)
The Cats Bah (WB LT Cartoon; 1954)
Dumb-Hounded (Droopy MGM Cartoon; 1943)
Duplicity (Film; 2009)
Fractured Friendship (Chilly Willy & Woody Woodpecker Cartoon; 1965)
Hollywood Shuffle (Film; 1987)
Hothouse, by Brian W. Aldiss (Novel; 1962)
I Do Not Want What I Haven’t Got, by Sinead O’Connor (Album; 1990)
I Love You, Man (Film; 2009)
The Impossible Possum, featuring Barney Bear (MGM Cartoon; 1954)
Insurgent (Film; 2015)
Knowing (Film; 2009)
Lady Chatterly’s Lover, by D.H. Lawrence (Novel; 1928)
Man of La Mancha (Broadway Musical; 1965)
Meet the Temptations, by The Temptations (Album; 1964)
Neptune Nonsense (Rainbow Parade Cartoon; 1936)
Newman Laugh-O-Grams (Disney Cartoon; 1921)
Noises Off (Film; 1992)
Off to China (Terrytoons Cartoon; 1936)
The Pink Panther (Film; 1964)
The Postman Always Rings Twice (Film; 1981)
The Romance of Betty Boop (Animated TV Film; 1985)
The Scarlet Letter, by Nathaniel Hawthorne (Novel; 1850)
Sham Battle Shenanigans (Terrytoons Cartoon; 1942)
Straight, No Chaser, by Thelonious Monk (Album; 1967)
Symphony Hour (Disney Cartoon; 1942)
Top Cat and the Beverly Hills Cats (Hanna-Barbera Animated TV Film; 1988)
Uncle Tom’s Cabin, by Harriet Beecher Stowe (Novel; 1857)
Wacky Quacky (Phantasies Cartoon; 1947)
What Price Fleadom (MGM Cartoon; 1948)
Wild Things (Film; 1998)
Ye Olde Songs, featuring Farmer Al Falfa (Terrytoons Cartoon; 1932)
Zen in the Art of Archery, by Eugen Herrigel (Philosophy Book; 1948)
Zombeavers (Film; 2015)
Today’s Name Days
Claudia, Wolfram (Austria)
Ivan, Nicet, Pavao (Croatia)
Světlana (Czech Republic)
Gordius (Denmark)
Malve, Malvi, Malviine (Estonia)
Aki, Jaakkima, Joakim, Jooa, Kim, Kimi (Finland)
Herbert, Printemps (France)
Claudia, Wolfram (Germany)
Claudia, Rodi, Rodianos (Greece)
Klaudia (Hungary)
Alessandra,, Claudia (Italy)
Irbe, Made, Magda, Magdalēna (Latvia)
Filomenas, Imgarda, Irma, Tautvilė, Žygimantas (Lithuania)
Joakim, Kim (Norway)
Aleksander, Aleksandra, Ambroży, Anatol, Bogusław, Cyriaka, Eufemia, Klaudia, Patrycjusz, Ruprecht, Wasyl, Wincenty (Poland)
Víťazoslav (Slovakia)
Alejandra, Daniel, Martín (Spain)
Joakim, Kim (Sweden)
Dillan, Dillion, Dillon, Drew, Dru, Dylan, Dylon (USA)
Today is Also…
Day of Year: Day 80 of 2024; 286 days remaining in the year
ISO: Day 3 of week 12 of 2024
Celtic Tree Calendar: Fearn (Alder) [Day 4 of 28]
Chinese: Month 2 (Ding-Mao), Day 11 (Guy-Wei)
Chinese Year of the: Dragon 4722 (until January 29, 2025)
Hebrew: 10 Adair II 5784
Islamic: 10 Ramadan 1445
J Cal: 20 Green; Sixday [20 of 30]
Julian: 7 March 2024
Moon: 82%: Waxing Gibbous
Positivist: 24 Aristotle (3rd Month) [John the Evangelist]
Runic Half Month: Beore (Birch Tree) [Day 11 of 15]
Season: Spring (Day 2 of 92)
Week: 3rd Week of March
Zodiac: Pisces (Day 31 of 31)
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[ID: A darkened, low resolution version of a painting by George Caleb Bingham, "Fur Traders Descending the Missouri," with what looks like a black cat at the front of a canoe with two people in it. The superimposed text reads, "We are lost. Why is our captain a cat?" and the text, "Quiet." next to the animal at the front. / end ID.]

#really thought this was an oxenfree ii quote at first#Image described#if we actually get into it the original you can see it's a black fox#mmmm#but this is just a#meme
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Here’s a glimpse of some artwork we're working with for The American Crisis! Exciting things are in the works—stay tuned for updates!
Source: Washington Crossing the Delaware by George Caleb Bingham
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DRIFTING
I just finished Percival Everett's novel James, a telling of Mark Twain's Huckleberry Finn from Jim's point of view. This might reveal more about my temper than the book itself, but I haven't cared more about an ending than I did since watching Once Upon a Time in Hollywood five years ago. Turning the final pages I was right there with the characters, cheering as if it were a sporting event. I wanted them to defy logic, to win.
[Spoiler alert] There's a plot twist mid-book that shocked me in its presumption, so contrary it is to my own presumptions about Twain's intentions. Jim reveals that he and Hank are related biologically. So what had been a story about deep friendship between two very different men (in status, in race, in age, in knowledge, in physical strength) becomes something else entirely. And yet it doesn't. The indelible, horrible imbalance in their status -- free man and enslaved person -- remains the driving force of the story and Jim's life.
The turn is also shocking because Huck Finn is shorthand, even today, for a kind of hokey, American, small-town innocence. Though Twain is writing frankly about the prebellum south, our pop-cultural image of the character remains stubbornly nostalgic. In James Huck must hide a more complicated family history and personal identity, which sets a greater, sadder distance between him and Jim. There's nothing innocent about the decisions each makes to survive.
George Caleb Bingham's 1845 painting Fur Traders Descending the Mississippi, which I remember vividly from an old college art history book, popped into my head a thousand times while reading Jim. In it a young man and an older man slip by in a canoe, in placid waters, in daylight, smiling straight at the viewer. (Though neither book serves up a river scene this happy.) The painting's full caption at The Met explains that its original title was French Trader and his Half-Breed Son, which an arts organization updated before showing it in New York. As in so many of our country's stories, race is present and left comfortably unspoken.
Fur Traders Descending the Mississippi, 1845, George Caleb Bingham. Courtesy of The Metropolitan Museum of Art.
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