Prisoners from the Front 1866
Prisoners from the Front 1866
Winslow Homer (1836-1910)
Oil on canvas; 24 x 38 in. (61.0 x 96.5 cm)
Description:
The material that Homer collected as an artist-correspondent
during the Civil War provided the subjects for his first oil
paintings. In 1866, one year after the war ended and four years
after he reputedly began to paint in oil, Homer completed this
picture, a work that established his reputation. It represents an
actual scene from the war in which a Union officer, Brigadier
General Francis Channing Barlow (1834-1896) captured several
Confederate officers on June 21, 1864. The background depicts the
battlefield at Petersburg, Virginia. Infrared photography and
numerous studies indicate that the painting underwent many changes
in the course of completion.
This history painting depicts
Union General Francis Channing Barlow receiving three Confederate
Prisoners of war at the battle of Spotsylvania in 1864. Homer had
worked for the magazine Harper`s Weekly as an illustrator during the
war, and he met with Barlow personally at the front. While referring
to an actual event, Homer chose a generic title. He also reflected
prevailing Northern attitudes about the rebellion by showing a
dashing Union officer facing three stereotypical Southern
characters. Eugene Benson, writing in the New York Evening Post,
offered this analysis: "On one side the hard, firm-faced New England
man, without bluster, and with the dignity of a life animated by
principle, confronting the audacious, reckless, impudent young
Virginian. . .; next to him the poor, bewildered old man, . . .
scarcely able to realize the new order of things about to sweep away
the associations of his life; back of him the `poor white,` stupid,
stolid, helpless, yielding to the magnetism of superior natures and
incapable of resisting authority" (qtd. in Cikovsky and Kelly
26-27). Homer conveys at once the effectiveness of the democratic
man in General Barlow, and the various character flaws that
Northerners believed issued from Southern aristocratic society and
gave rise to the rebellion itself. Three decades later
Stephen Crane would describe a similar
scene of Confederate prisoners, but with a different emphasis.
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