“Morning Glories” Dry mounted print from an original oil painting by Winslow Homer
Canvas print facsimile of Morning Glories an oil painting by Winslow Homer, 1873. The original painting is in a private collection.
This is a dry mounted print with a textured surface to mimic canvas.
One of numerous depictions of young beautiful women that Homer painted in the early 1870s, Morning Glories is a departure from his previous exploration of men and masculinity. Sitting in the window in the mid-afternoon, the woman is looking at the twining flowers that give the painting its name. She sits in a deep window sill typical of wooden window frames and stone houses found in Hurley. This could be the exterior view of the same window seen in Homer's "Window" paintings such as An Open Window and At the Window.
Dimensions 16” X 24”
Donated by the HHS Museum