#archivesfind
Explore tagged Tumblr posts
archivesofamericanart · 7 years ago
Photo
Tumblr media
Archives Road Trip: West Virginia
Palmer Hayden (1890–1973) compiled dozens of sketchbooks during his celebrated career as a painter of African American subjects. They document the years Hayden lived in France and also his travels in the United States. While on a road trip in 1938, Hayden stopped to sketch the cityscape of Weirton, a town in the northern panhandle of West Virginia. This drawing shows smoke billowing from steel mills. At the time, Weirton was a leading producer of steel in the United States.
This sketch is currently on view in our exhibition, Off the Beaten Track: A Road Trip through the Archives of American Art, on view through June 3 in our Lawrence A. Fleischman Gallery in Washington, D.C.
18 notes · View notes
archivesofamericanart · 8 years ago
Photo
Tumblr media
A page from sculptor Adolph Weinman's annotated sketchbook of human anatomy. 💪
142 notes · View notes
archivesofamericanart · 7 years ago
Photo
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
On National Bird Day, we’re sharing some of our favorite illustrations of our feathered friends. 
Study for 'Winter' by Peter Blume, circa 1964.http://s.si.edu/2CxugKU 
Watercolor sketch of a Green Heron by Edwin Lord Weeks, ca. 1900. http://s.si.edu/2m3aIre
 Etching of a Mountain Bluebird by Benson Bond Moore. s.si.edu/2AviWwO
Pen and ink sketch of a bird by Nathan Oliveira, 1974. http://s.si.edu/2CJp4aF
115 notes · View notes
archivesofamericanart · 7 years ago
Photo
Tumblr media
Archives Road Trip: South Carolina
Blanche Lazzell (1878–1956) kept this diary while attending boarding school at South Carolina Coeducational Institute in Edgefield. Lazzell provided details on her day-to-day life—her art classes, her friends, and the weather. After graduating in in 1900, she observed on her train home: “It was a lonely spring evening, I watched the sun go down behind the tall green pines. The moon came up and greeted the lonely little girl. I watched the old moon and it seemed to speak and cheer me on my lonely journey.” The thoughtful young artist eventually became a multi-talented printmaker and designer.
Lazzell's diary is currently on view in our exhibition, Off the Beaten Track: A Road Trip through the Archives of American Art, on view through June 3 in our Lawrence A. Fleischman Gallery in Washington, D.C. 
44 notes · View notes