A Visit from the Old Mistress

Winslow Homer, A Visit from the Old Mistress, 1876, oil on canvas, Smithsonian American Art Museum, Gift of William T. Evans, 1909.7.28
Winslow Homer, A Visit from the Old Mistress, 1876, oil on canvas, 1824 in. (45.761.0 cm.), Smithsonian American Art Museum, Gift of William T. Evans, 1909.7.28
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Artwork Details

Title
A Visit from the Old Mistress
Date
1876
Dimensions
1824 in. (45.761.0 cm.)
Credit Line
Gift of William T. Evans
Mediums
Mediums Description
oil on canvas
Classifications
Subjects
  • Figure group
  • African American
  • History — United States — Black History
  • Allegory — civic — injustice
  • Architecture Interior — domestic
Object Number
1909.7.28

Artwork Description

A Visit from the Old Mistress captures a tentative encounter in the postwar South. The freed slaves are no longer obliged to greet their former mistress with welcoming gestures, and one remains seated as she would not have been allowed to do before the war. Winslow Homer composed the work from sketches he had made while traveling through Virginia; it conveys a silent tension between two communities seeking to understand their future. The formal equivalence between the standing figures suggests the balance that the nation hoped to find in the difficult years of Reconstruction.

Exhibition Label, Smithsonian American Art Museum, 2006

Works by this artist (4 items)

Hubert Davis, Delaware Waters, lithograph, Smithsonian American Art Museum, Transfer from the Evander Childs High School, Bronx, New York through the General Services Administration, 1975.83.43
Delaware Waters
lithograph
Not on view
Hubert Davis, Central Park Roadways, lithograph, Smithsonian American Art Museum, Transfer from the Evander Childs High School, Bronx, New York through the General Services Administration, 1975.83.41
Central Park Roadways
lithograph
Not on view
Hubert Davis, Cornpatch in Dusk, ca. 1935-1943, lithograph on paper, Smithsonian American Art Museum, Transfer from the Evander Childs High School, Bronx, New York through the General Services Administration, 1975.83.42
Cornpatch in Dusk
Dateca. 1935-1943
lithograph on paper
Not on view
Hubert Davis, Window in the Valley, 1937, lithograph, Smithsonian American Art Museum, Transfer from D.C. Public Library, 1967.72.78
Window in the Valley
Date1937
lithograph
Not on view

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      In this podcast, curator Eleanor Jones Harvey discusses 6 featured paintings from The Civil War and American Art exhibition. This episode looks at A Visit from the Old Mistress by Winslow Homer. The Civil War and American Art examines how America's artists represented the impact of the Civil War and its aftermath. The exhibition follows the conflict from palpable unease on the eve of war, to heady optimism that it would be over with a single battle, to a growing realization that this conflict would not end quickly and a deepening awareness of issues surrounding emancipation and the need for reconciliation. Genre and landscape painting captured the transformative impact of the war, not traditional history painting.

      More Artworks from the Collection

      John Steuart Curry, Self-Portrait, 1928, charcoal, conte crayon and pencil on paper, Smithsonian American Art Museum, Museum purchase, 1985.78
      Self-Portrait
      Date1928
      charcoal, conte crayon and pencil on paper
      Not on view
      Untitled
      Dateca.1920
      conte crayon and charcoal on paper
      Not on view
      Ron Adams, Untitled, 1988, ink, charcoal, conte crayon, and gesso on paper mounted on linen, Smithsonian American Art Museum, Gift of Darlene Mason Denard, 1994.58
      Untitled
      Date1988
      ink, charcoal, conte crayon, and gesso on paper mounted on linen
      Not on view
      William Zorach, (Untitled) (study for relief panel), ca. 1952-1955, charcoal and conte crayon on tracing paper mounted on paper, Smithsonian American Art Museum, Gift of Dahlov Ipcar and Tessim Zorach, 1968.154.388
      (Untitled) (study for relief panel)
      Dateca. 1952-1955
      charcoal and conte crayon on tracing paper mounted on paper
      Not on view