Grant Wood: American Gothic and Other Fables

Mar 2–June 10, 2018


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By 1935, Grant Wood began to streamline his landscape style, replacing the ornamental frills and mannerisms of his earlier work with broad, reductive shapes. He retained this stylistic simplification as he shifted to more patriotic subject matter in response to his worry that America had lost its will to defend itself against fascism, which was on the rise in Europe. He envisioned a series of paintings of American folktales, beginning with Parson Weems’s fictional account of George Washington as a child confessing to having chopped down his father’s cherry tree. 

Faced with Nazi victories over the Allies in the first years of World War II, Wood turned his attention to depicting what he called the “simple, everyday things that make life significant to the average person” in order to awaken the country to what it stood to lose. He completed only two works in this second series—Spring in the Country and Spring in Town—before his death from pancreatic cancer on February 2, 1942, two hours before he would have turned fifty-one.

Spring in the Country, 1941

Painting of a country landscape. In the foreground, a woman in child plant crops as a man approaches on a horse and wagon behind them.
Painting of a country landscape. In the foreground, a woman in child plant crops as a man approaches on a horse and wagon behind them.

Grant Wood, Spring in the Country, 1941. Oil on composition board, 23 1/2 x 21 1/2 in. (59.7 x 54.6 cm). Cedar Rapids Museum of Art, Iowa; museum purchase 93.12. © Figge Art Museum, successors to the Estate of Nan Wood Graham/Licensed by VAGA, New York, NY. Photograph © 2017 Mark Tade



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