The Aegean Sea

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The Aegean Sea
ArtistFrederic Edwin Church
Yearc. 1877
MediumOil on canvas
Dimensions137.2 cm × 214 cm (54.0 in × 84 in)
LocationMetropolitan Museum of Art, New York City

The Aegean Sea is a c. 1877 oil painting by American artist Frederic Edwin Church, and one of his last large-scale paintings.

Description

The painting measures 54 by 84.25 inches (137.2 cm × 214.0 cm). It is a

double rainbow.[1]

In this work, Church moved away from his usual naturalistic style to a more idealised style. The atmospheric effects that may be inspired by the paintings of J. M. W. Turner which Church had seen in London (although Church had already used a double rainbow in his 1866 painting Rainy Season in the Tropics). The work may also take inspiration from Turner's 1826 view of the Roman Forum. Church designed a gilded frame for the painting, decorated with an eclectic mixture of Middle Eastern motifs, including stars and rosettes, and egg-and-dart and other moldings.[2]

History

The painting was bought by the railway tycoon William H. Osborn, a close friend and supporter of Church, and bequeathed to the Metropolitan Museum of Art on the death of his wife Virginia Reed (Sturges) Osborn in 1902.[3]

See also

References