Showing posts with label Harper's Weekly. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Harper's Weekly. Show all posts

Tuesday, December 2, 2025

American as (apple) pie. Winslow Homer's depiction of a hungry Union soldier is acquired by SoCal museum, which will show it off Sunday in revamped galleries

Winslow Homer's 1863 painting "The Sutler's Tent" debuts Sunday (Courtesy The Huntington)
A Civil War camp scene painted by Winslow Homer – who captured war’s fury at the front and documented soldiers’ lives behind the lines – will debut Sunday as part of the relaunch of an American art gallery at a Southern California museum.

Homer (below) was in his mid-20s when he became an artist-reporter for Harper’s Weekly, embedding with the Union army in Virginia. While most of his work about the conflict was illustrations, he did produce several paintings, including “The Sutler’s Tent,” which was acquired by The Huntington.

The San Marino, Calif., institution recently announced the acquisition of the work, which was purchased for an undisclosed amount from a New York-based gallery. The Ahmanson Foundation funded the acquisition in honor of the 250th anniversary of the founding of the United States, officials said.

The 1863 painting, only 16-1/4 inches by 12 inches, shows two Yankee cavalry troopers near a tent, one munching on what appears to be a slice of pie (another theory has it as bread and cheese).

The blog Los Angeles County Museum on Fire points out the celebrated artist first depicted the subject in an 1862 sketch, which shows more than a half dozen members of the 3rd Pennsylvania Cavalry standing near a tent. One of them is sitting on a rail, enjoying a snack.

The drawing was modified for publication in Harper’s Weekly and entitled "Thanksgiving in Camp."

“Harper's Weekly reproduced Homer's war art as wood engravings. The Sutler's Tent is related to a Thanksgiving-themed illustration that ran in November 1862,” according to William Poundstone’s blog. “That means the engraving came before the painting, dated 1863. The horizontal-format print shows many more figures than the painting and clearly shows the tent. … Homer evidently felt the tight cropping of the painting made a stronger composition.”

Homer's 3rd Pennsylvania Cavalry (National Gallery of Art) and Harper's Weekly version (Metropolitan Museum of Art)
Homer honed his craft during the Civil War. A 2015 article in Yale News describes how the self-taught artist had to work quickly and be an astute observer. The young man grew a beard like many soldiers and also wore worn and dirty clothing.

“Homer, like other war correspondents, considered what he did to be a public service and felt as though he endured some of the same kind of experiences as soldiers did,” Keely Orgeman, a curator with the Yale University Art Gallery, told the publication. “When Homer was stationed in Yorktown on the front, he was unable to eat for three days, along with all of the soldiers. According to his mother, he was completely changed by that experience.”

Homer’s other well-known Civil War works include “Prisoners from the Front,”Home, Sweet Home” and “A Sharp Shooter on Picket Duty.”

Homer's "Prisoners from the Front" is owned by the Metropolitan Museum of Art and displayed in New York.
The purchase of “The Sutler’s Tent” was first reported by the Los Angeles Times.

Annabel Adams, vice president of communications and marketing for The Huntington, told the Picket the reasoning for acquiring the museum’s first Homer painting was “especially important as we set to launch a reinstallation of American art galleries on December 7 as part of our ‘This Land Is’ initiative.”

The multiyear effort includes the reinstallation of seven galleries in the Virginia Steele Scott Galleries of American Art.” One reopened in September; six will debut Sunday.

As Poundstone reported, “The Sutler’s Tent” will be the centerpiece of a room about the Civil War and Reconstruction. On display will be a signed copy of the Emancipation Proclamation from The Huntington’s Library and Jean-Baptiste Carpeaux’s scultpure "Why Born Enslaved!," The Huntington said in a news release.

Adams said the institution’s Civil War holdings are renowned. Among them:

-- Papers relating to President Abraham Lincoln’s bodyguard Ward Hill Lamon;

-- Ciphered communications between Abraham Lincoln and army commanders;

-- Lincoln memorabilia and manuscript collector Judd Stewart;

-- Scrapbooks made by war correspondent and illustrator James E. Taylor (left, courtesy The Huntington);

-- Alfred R. Waud’s 1863 drawing of Rebel prisoners at Brandy Station.

Christina Nielson, the Hannah and Russel Kully Director of the Art Museum at The Huntington, said “Sutler’s Tent” expands the dialogue between the art and library collections.

“As we look toward the 250th anniversary of the United States, the painting invites reflection on a pivotal chapter in our nation’s history -- one that continues to shape the American experience,” she said in the news release.

The Huntington also features botanical gardens and a research center.

Monday, February 21, 2011

Part 1 of Alfred Waud: Living historian brings Civil War sketch artist off the page

John Rapp would gladly walk in Alfred Waud’s shoes.

From his felt hat and bewhiskered face to his leather haversack and boots, Rapp projects a living image of the famous Civil War sketch artist -- minus the English accent.

For more than 10 years, Rapp, 55, of Cornelius, N.C, has researched and portrayed what some consider the greatest illustrator of the war.

Authenticity is paramount.

Rapp takes school construction paper and weathers it to approximate the paper and colors used by Waud.

“I put it out in the sunlight to make the same shade,” he says.

Waud (pronounced WODE), saw it all with the Union’s Army of the Potomac -- from the bright-eyed optimism in 1861 to Gen. Robert E. Lee tired ride (below) following his surrender at Appomattox Courthouse in southern Virginia.

The artist, most famous for his illustrations used in Harper’s Weekly, was known for his bravery and quality of work.

Because reproducing photographs was in its infancy, Waud and other illustrators principally brought the action and army life to the public.

Why was Rapp, an 8th grade American history teacher in Charlotte, drawn to Waud specificially?

“The immediacy of his sketches,” Rapp says. “The freezing of action.”

“Here is a guy who was on the front line,” he added.

As a member of the Bohemian Brigade, a confederation of living historians doing impressions of Civil War correspondents and artists, Rapp has done significant research into the journalist he portrays.

“We are so far off the edge,” Rapp says of his Bohemian brothers. “Most of the people [who come to events] don’t know about artists. I am telling them something new.”

Rapp made several trips to the Library of Congress, which has a large collection of Waud’s works, and as a registered researcher he has held originals.

“It is chilling,” says the native of Shoemakersville, Pa., north of Reading. “It is thrilling. That this piece of paper was at Gettysburg.”

Rapp also has researched Alfred’s brother, William, a fine illustrator in his own right.

Other research includes a study of “Alfred E. Waud: Sketch Artist” by Frederic E. Ray and Philip Van Doren Sterns’s “They Were There,” a look at Waud and other Civil War journalists promoted by newspapers and weeklies of the time as “Special Artists.”

The four-volume, “Battles and Leaders of the Civil War” was the first significant Civil War book to portray the effort of these gregarious chroniclers.

Rapp, who sold RVs before switching to teaching, makes a reference to a Waud sketch (above) of the skirmish between the 14th Brooklyn and Confederate Cavalry at Antietam on Sept. 17, 1862.

“You can see the action going on,” he says.

Rapp, who includes sailing among his hobbies, has a particular fondness for doing his Waud impression at Gettysburg.

“Waud’s Rock” is the site of famed Civil War photographer Timothy O. Sullivan’s image of the jaunty artist, who was born in England in 1828.

Most of the time, Rapp sketches likenesses (right) of Waud’s work, but he sometimes does extemporaneous sketches for the public and friends.

He enjoys educating individuals about the amazing experiences of such artists.

“I’m a pretty good artist. Nothing fancy. I try to reproduce his work faithfully.”

Rapp does not sell his work. “I do it for the enjoyment and to educate.”

Some years, Rapp may go to 10 battle re-enactments or living history events. In 2011, so far he is going to an event in Rockford, N.C., a 19th century plantation and a meeting of a Sons of Union Veterans of the Civil War camp.

“People want to know who I am and why I am dressed like that,” he says.

Readers had plenty of material during the war, including the New York Illustrated News and Frank Leslie's Illustrated Newspaper. Rapp totes copies of Harper’s Weekly, which was read by about 1.5 million people each time it was printed.

Among Waud’s contemporaries were Theodore R. Davis and Edwin Forbes. Forbes was “better artistically but the immediacy and intimacy of Waud was different,” says Rapp.

Civil War photos were limited generally to camp life and scenes after battles.

“If you want to know what war looked like you have to look at the sketches,” says Rapp.

Upcoming in Picket: A deeper look at Waud's work, why he is important and his legacy. We'll look at collections in Washington, D.C., and New Orleans and will speak with curators.

Images: Photo of John Rapp, "Waud Rock" and his drawings, courtesy of John Rapp; photograph of Waud by Timothy O'Sullivan, Civil War Treasures from the New York Historical Society, digital ID nhnycw/ad ad07001; Waud drawing at Antietam, Library of Congress, LC-DIG-ppmsca-21027; Waud sketch of Lee, Library of Congress, LC-DIG-ppmsca-21320