Brushwork

Mark Leithauser, Brushwork, 1993, oil on panel, Smithsonian American Art Museum, Gift of the Hakuta Family, 2010.42, © Mark Leithauser
Copied Mark Leithauser, Brushwork, 1993, oil on panel, 13 5810 34 in. (34.627.2 cm), Smithsonian American Art Museum, Gift of the Hakuta Family, 2010.42, © Mark Leithauser

Artwork Details

Title
Brushwork
Date
1993
Dimensions
13 5810 34 in. (34.627.2 cm)
Copyright
© Mark Leithauser
Credit Line
Gift of the Hakuta Family
Mediums
Mediums Description
oil on panel
Classifications
Keywords
  • Object — art tool — artist’s brush
Object Number
2010.42

Artwork Description

Mark Leithauser blends elements of the real and the imaginary in his paintings, etchings, and silverpoints. For Brushwork, he used a technique called trompe l'oeil ("fool the eye") to make a two-dimensional surface appear three-dimensional. The piece rewards close viewing: the engaging realism of the brushes and etching tools leads viewers to the postage stamp–like squares. The square at left shows a detail of Titian's Danae, from 1545. The square at right re-creates a nineteenth-century advertisement for printmaking tools, with a woman holding an adjustable lithographic crayon. The frayed brush bristles and the wrinkled photos show wear and use, and the missing set of tools suggests they were removed by the artist to make this painting. Leithauser commissioned the frame for this work from an independent craftsman, done in the style of a Greene and Greene frame he saw at the Gamble House in Pasadena, California. The Greene brothers, Charles and Henry, founded an architectural firm in 1894 known for American Arts and Crafts design, and the Gamble House was one of their commissions.