...And the Home of the Brave

Description

Charles Demuth here portrayed a cigar factory using a sharply linear, planar style inspired by streamlined machinery. The building was part of the industrial landscape in his hometown of Lancaster, Pennsylvania, which Demuth began depicting with increasing monumentality in the last years of his life. Although he presented the factory with no reference to the potentially detrimental effects of industrialization, the painting expresses some irony or ambivalence. Demuth drew the title from the last line of “The Star-Spangled Banner,” which was adopted as the United States national anthem the year he painted this work, thus implying that for many workers, the factory was the new “home of the brave.”

Provenance

The artist; bequeathed to Georgia O'Keeffe, Abiquiu, New Mexico, and New York, N.Y., 1935; given by Georgia O'Keeffe to the Art Institute of Chicago, 1948.

...And the Home of the Brave

Charles Demuth

1931

Accession Number

64276

Medium

Oil and graphite on fiber board

Dimensions

74.8 × 59.7 cm (29 1/2 × 23 1/2 in.)

Classification

oil on board

Museum

The Art Institute of Chicago

Chicago, United States

Credit Line

Alfred Stieglitz Collection, gift of Georgia O'Keeffe