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2010: Henry Ossawa Tanner and his Contemporaries, [63] Des Moines Art Center (December–February 2011). 2012: Henry Ossawa Tanner: Modern Spirit, [64] Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, Philadelphia (January–April), then to Cincinnati Art Museum [65] (May–September) and to Houston Museum of Fine Arts (October–January 2013)
Uploaded a work by Henry Ossawa Tanner from book: "Henry Ossawa Tanner: Modern Spirit". Edited by Anna O. Marley with UploadWizard: File usage.
Nicodemus Visiting Christ is a painting by Henry Ossawa Tanner, made in Jerusalem in 1899 during the artist's second visit to what was then Palestine. [1] The painting is biblical, featuring Nicodemus talking privately to Christ in the evening, and is an example of Tanner's nocturnal light paintings, in which the world is shown in night light.
The Resurrection of Lazarus is a painting by Henry Ossawa Tanner entered into the Paris Salon in 1897 and winning a third place medal. [1] [2] During his lifetime, this was the painting for which he was most known, his "masterwork". [2] Since his death in 1937, secular tastes have pushed The Banjo Lesson to the top place in public esteem. [2]
Lower res version in paper: "Pursuit of the Ideal Effect: The Materials and Techniques of Henry Ossawa Tanner" by Brian Baade and Amber L Kerr. Chapter in the book "Henry Ossawa Tanner: Modern Spirit", published by the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, Philadelphia and the University of California Press, Berkeley, Los Angeles, London; page 30.
English: Photograph by Henry Ossawa Tanner used as a photo study for an early version of his painting, The Banjo Lesson.In the book Henry Ossawa Tanner: Modern Spirit edited by Anna O. Marley, the picture is identified as being in the collection of Jacques Tanner, Le Douhet, France.
Abraham's Oak is a painting by Henry Ossawa Tanner, an American painter who lived in France, completed about 1905. [1] While Tanner is well known today for two paintings in the United States, The Banjo Lesson and The Thankful Poor, both about African-American families, the bulk of his artwork, including some of his most iconic paintings, were concerned with exploring biblical subjects.
Flight into Egypt was a painting by Henry Ossawa Tanner, created in Paris about 1899 and displayed at the Carnegie Institute that year, along with Judas. [1] The painting, a religious work, is an example of Tanner's symbolist paintings. The 1899 version was his first version of the painting. [2]