Prisoners from the Front

1 comments | Posted: 1/23/2012 | Author: Laura June Davis

Before Winslow Homer became a famed sea-scape painter, he was a Civil War correspondent and illustrator for Harpers Weekly. The above paiting, entitled "Prisoners from the Front," (1866) was featured in an online Wall Street Journal article today entitled, "It's History (Believe It or Not)." The article provided the following description of the painting:

The material that Homer collected as an artist-correspondent during the Civil War provided the subjects for his first oil paintings. In 1866, one year after the war ended and four years after he reputedly began to paint in oil, Homer completed this picture, a work that established his reputation. It represents an actual scene from the war in which a Union officer, Brigadier General Francis Channing Barlow (1834–1896), captured several Confederate officers on June 21, 1864. The background depicts the battlefield at Petersburg, Virginia. Infrared photography and numerous studies indicate that the painting underwent many changes in the course of completion.

Enjoy!

Image Credit: The Metropolitan Museum of Art.

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Comments

Andy Hall 1/23/2012 11:57 PM

Great subject. Ron Maxwell used this painting as a frame for a scene in Gettysburg (1993), as an encounter to lay out the contrasting motivations of Union and Confederate soldiers. Not the most inspired writing, but at least none of the actors in this scene had to wear the world's most ridiculous fake beard.

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