A critical survey of nineteenth-century American artist Winslow Homer that chronicles his life and presents all his major paintings as well as several lesser-known woodcuts and etchings.
An extended essay that examines the life, work, and sensibilities of nineteenth-century American painter Winslow Homer, with over one hundred color and black-and-white illustrations.
A biography of American painter Winslow Homer, with hundreds of reproductions of his paintings, a chronology, and a list of his works in public collections.
A story inspired by Winslow Homer's 1879 painting "Girl and Laurel," in which a strong-willed, beautiful orphan on the run from her guardian arrives in Homer's Massachusetts hometown and befriends him while searching for details about her past.
A young southern girl tells of the time Winslow Homer came to town to paint pictures and defied the town fathers by portraying the lives of the poor Black people who lived down the red clay road.