Ongoing
Winslow Homer: Eyewitness

Winslow Homer: Eyewitness

Presented by Harvard Art Museums at Harvard Art Museums

During the Civil War (1861–1865), American artist Winslow Homer (1836–1910) served as a correspondent for Harper’s. His sketches of soldiers, both in battle on the front lines and in quieter moments back at camp, were reproduced to accompany the journal’s accounts of the conflict. Homer worked for Harper’s just as new technologies were making it possible to rapidly reproduce newsworthy images on a large scale. Working together with Harper’s editors and engravers, he employed a range of pictorial strategies to reassure skeptical readers that his illustrations were not fabrications, but eyewitness observations “drawn on the spot.”

While in the field as an artist-correspondent, Homer developed habits of seeing and pictorial strategies that informed his work in other media. In addition to tracing these connections, this show explores broader questions that Homer’s art raises about the responsibility of artists who work in periods riven by war and conflict.

Admission Info

Open daily, 10am to 5pm; closed major holidays. Please see website for more information about admission rates: harvardartmuseums.org/plan-your-visit

Phone: 617-495-9400

Dates & Times

2019/08/31 - 2020/01/05

Location Info

Harvard Art Museums

Accessibility Info

Learn more about accessibility on the Plan Your Visit page: harvardartmuseums.org/plan-your-visit