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The Amon Carter Museum of American Art (the Carter) is located in Fort Worth, Texas, in the city's cultural district.The museum's permanent collection features paintings, photography, sculpture, and works on paper by leading artists working in the United States and its North American territories in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries.
Mary Cassatt (1844-1926); Standing Woman, Holding a Fan; 1878-1879; Distemper with metallic paint on canvas; Amon Carter Museum of American Art, Fort Worth, Texas, Acquisition in honor of Ruth Carter Stevenson and the 50th Anniversary of the Amon Carter Museum of American Art with funds provided by Anne T. and Robert M. Bass, The Walton Family ...
In 1927, O'Keeffe made a painting of a close-up of the wide red petals of the canna lily. Painted in oil, it is 36 + 1 ⁄ 8 by 30 + 1 ⁄ 8 inches (91.8 cm × 76.5 cm). Once among private collections, it is now owned by Amon Carter Museum of American Art in Fort Worth, Texas. [21]
Idle Hours is an oil-on-canvas landscape painting by the American Impressionist painter William Merritt Chase. Completed in 1894, it measures 90.2 by 64.8 centimeters, and is now housed at the Amon Carter Museum of American Art, Fort Worth. [1] It is one of many paintings by Chase that depicted his wife and children at ease. [2]
Sandy Rodriguez - In Isolation [solo exhibition], Amon Carter Museum of American Art, Fort Worth, TX Mixpantli: Contemporary Echoes, Los Angeles County Museum of Art, Los Angeles, CA Borderlands, The Huntington Library, Art Museum, and Botanical Gardens, San Marino, CA Estamos Bien - La Trienal 20/21, El Museo, New York, NY
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The Swimming Hole (also known as Swimming and The Old Swimming Hole) is an 1884–85 painting by the American artist Thomas Eakins (1844–1916), Goodrich catalog #190, in the collection of the Amon Carter Museum of American Art in Fort Worth, Texas.
Abduction of Boone's Daughter, 1855–56, detail, Amon Carter Museum of American Art. He is known for an early painting of a colonial incident: his The Abduction of Boone's Daughter by the Indians (1855–56), a depiction of the 1776 capture near Boonesborough, Kentucky of Jemima Boone and two other girls by a Cherokee-Shawnee raiding party.