Artwork Details
- Title
- Washington Crossing the Delaware: British Soldier
- Artist
- Date
- 1961
- Location
- Not on view
- Dimensions
- 66 3⁄4 x 24 1⁄4 x 6 1⁄2 in. (169.5 x 61.6 x 16.5 cm.)
- Credit Line
- Gift of Mr. and Mrs. David K. Anderson, Martha Jackson Memorial Collection
- Mediums Description
- acrylic on plywood
- Classifications
- Subjects
- Occupation — military — soldier
- Dress — uniform — military uniform
- History — United States — Revolution
- Waterscape — river — Delaware River
- Figure male
- Object Number
- 1980.137.75C
Artwork Description
In 1959, Alex Katz began painting figures on canvas, cutting them out and then pasting them onto wooden boards. Two years later the playwright Kenneth Koch saw an exhibition of these and asked Katz to produce the props and sets for his one-act play George Washington Crossing the Delaware. In Koch's satire, Washington’s famous crossing was motivated by his childhood when, after cutting down the cherry tree, the young Washington swam across a river to avoid his father's wrath. The play became an underground hit largely because of Katz's irreverent image of Washington. At the time, art critic Irving Sandler described the cutouts as "the perfect setting for the delivery of such lines as the following from the father of our country: 'I am tired and I need sleep. Good night America.'"