artist

Thomas Eakins

    15 
    Click to Favorite
    Click to Share

Regarded by many as the greatest American painter of the nineteenth century, Thomas Eakins began his studies at the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts. After further training in Paris, he returned home gripped by a fascination for painting the nude. Indeed, he was forced to resign from his teaching post after revealing a fully nude male model before a mixed life class. Despite the controversy, family wealth allowed him to continue his work uninterrupted. His portraits were highly valued for their psychological depth, in contrast to more superficial society portraits of the time. Eakins also pioneered the use of photography as an aid to his unsparing realism. His best-known painting, The Gross Clinic (1875), depicts surgery with characteristic and brutal honesty. He was also particularly skilled at portraying outdoor activities, most famously in Max Schmitt in a Single Scull (1871). His work had a huge influence on both the Ashcan School and the later American figurative tradition.

Read more

Editorial (2)

See all
A Trio of Majestic Landscapes

A Trio of Majestic Landscapes

In this series, the curatorial team presents one work from the Meural art library we find essential. (See all installments.)…

$58 million: “A Bit of a Bargain”

$58 million: “A Bit of a Bargain”

With our series Price Tag, we aim to demystify art auctioning, and debunk the surrounding myths. In each installment, we’ll…

Playlists (15)

See all
14

De Young Museum: Curated Picks

Click to More
17

Furry Friends

Click to More

Related artists

See all
Caspar David Friedrich

Caspar David Friedrich

German, 1774–1840
William Glackens

William Glackens

American, 1870–1938
Camille Pissarro

Camille Pissarro

French, Danish, 1830–1903

Works (59)

Date updatedTime periodName