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The Venetian Blind
The Venetian Blind
Image © Worcester Art Museum, all rights reserved.

The Venetian Blind

Artist (American, 1862–1938)
Date1898
Mediumoil on canvas
Dimensionscanvas: 131.8 × 97.5 cm (51 7/8 × 38 3/8 in.)
framed: 157.5 × 122.6 × 11.4 cm (62 × 48 1/4 × 4 1/2 in.)
ClassificationsPaintings
Credit LineMuseum Purchase
Object number1904.63
Label TextTarbell stunned conservative audiences with his bold illustration of a partially nude model lounging in an ornate interior. The Venetian Blind emphasizes the particular use of reflective light, seen diffusing through the window and illuminating the model, who shields her face from its brightness. By incorporating the traditional nude figure found in European art with evocative effects of natural light, Tarbell earned critical acclaim for his modern work, which won a bronze medal at the Paris Exposition Universelle in 1900.Provenancethe artist Edmund C. Tarbell, Boston; sold by the artist to the Worcester Art Museum, 1904
On View
Not on view
Study for the Venetian Blind
Edmund Charles Tarbell
1898
Arrangement in Pink and Gray (Afternoon Tea)
Edmund Charles Tarbell
about 1894
Rehearsal in the Studio
Edmund Charles Tarbell
about 1904
Venetian Girl
Charles Webster Hawthorne
1906
Early Spring
Charles A. Platt
late 19th century
Seascape
Charles Herbert Woodbury
early 20th century
The North Atlantic
Charles Herbert Woodbury
1902
Snow scene
William Charles Stevens
1874–1917
Charles Pettit
Charles Willson Peale
1792
Black Mountain
Charles Curtis Allen
1914
Path through the Woods
William Charles Stevens
1913
At Sunset
Charles Harold Davis
1870–1908