First half 20th century
North American Art



North American Art
Before the Second World War

Thomas Hart Benton

 

To get a larger version, click on the thumbnail version of a picture.

 

Benton: Self  Thomas Hart Benton

born: Neosho, Missouri; 15 April 1889
died: Kansas City, Missouri; 19 January 1975

Benton worked as a cartoonist for the American (a Missouri newspaper) in 1906. Later he studied at the Chicago Art Institute and then in Paris at the Académie Julian during a three-year visit. When he returned to the United States, he and his friends favored avant-garde art, but he abandoned a modern idiom in his own art about 1920. In 1924, he traveled through the rural American South and Midwest, sketching the scenes and people he encountered.

Benton's images of people and landscapes are done in an original style marked by brilliant color with undulating forms displaying stylized, cartoon like figures. Like his fellow Regionalists, he was annoyed by the domination of French art in American culture. He was convinced that the culture and images from the South and Midwest should be the source of American art. Benton emerged as the defacto head of the American Regionalist painters around the beginning of the depression.

During the depression Benton painted a number of notable murals. Among them are several "City Scenes"(1930-31) for the New School for Social Research in New York City (see below). He frequently transposed biblical and classical stories to rural American settings, as in "Susanna and the Elders" (1938) and "Persephone" (1939); both shown below.

For many years Benton taught at the Art Students League in New York City. Jackson Pollock was one of his pupils. Later he taught at the Kansas City Art Institute and School of Design, Kansas City, Mo.

 

  Benton: City Activities 1

City Activities 1

  Benton: City Activities 2

City Activities 2

   Benton: Missouri Legislature

Missouri Legislature

 Benton: Paying the Bill

Paying the Bill

 

 

   Benton: Persephone

Persephone

 Benton: Frankie and Johnny

Frankie and Johnny

 Benton: Ballad of the Jealous Lover

Ballad of
the Jealous Lover

 

 

Benton: Miner's Strike

Miner's Strike

 

 

 

 Benton: Romance

Romance
1931

Benton: Kansas Farmyard


Kansas Farmyard

  Benton: Autumn

Autumn

  Benton: Cradling Wheat (color)

Cradling Wheat

  

 Benton: Cradling Wheat [preliminary sketch]

Cradling Wheat

  Benton: Hail Storm

Hail Storm
1940

 Benton: The Lord is Our Sheppard

The Lord is Our Shepherd

  Benton: The Saving

The Saving

 Benton: Self

Self

 Benton: Musician

Musician

 Benton: Huck Finn

Huck Finn

 

 

First half 20th century
North American Art

2003-03-04