Photography by Dwight Primiano
Winter Scene in Brooklyn
Francis Guy found artistic inspiration in the daily activity of his Brooklyn neighborhood. Here, he depicted specific buildings, people, and even animals as seen from the window of his second-floor residence. Guy paid close attention to the diversity of the neighborhood and how each person contributed to the character of the place, whether socializing, slipping on ice, or cutting wood. A large concentration of Brooklyn’s free African American population lived near this very intersection, where Fulton and James Streets meet Front Street, now located under the Brooklyn Bridge.
ArtistFrancis Guy, 1760–1820
Date1820
MediumOil on canvas
Dimensions67 x 113 1/4 x 3 1/4 in.
Mark(s)verso, u.c., white sticker: [Hirschl & Adler Galleries Inc. label]
verso, u.c., white sticker: [The Metropolitan Museum of Art label]
verso, u.r.c., white sticker: [Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art label]
Inscription(s)l.c.: To been seen / a View / of / Brooklyn / by / Guy
verso, u.r.c., in pencil: 82 [up arrow] 112 [sideways arrows]
verso, u.r.c., in pencil: 69 ÷ 2 = 33 / 6
verso, u.r.c., in pencil: 33 1/2 + 60 = 93 1/2
verso, u.r.c., in pencil: 107 ÷ 2 = 53 / 10/7/6 = 53 1/2
verso, u.r.c., in pencil: 50 1/2
verso, u.r.c., in pencil: 67
verso, u.r.c., in pencil: 33 1/2 / 22 / 53 1/2
Credit LineCrystal Bridges Museum of American Art, Bentonville, Arkansas, 2006.98
ClassificationPainting
ProvenanceEstate of the Artist, 1820. Samuel McLean [1820-1893], Brooklyn, NY; given to Brooklyn Club, New York, NY, 1889; purchased by Richard A. Manoogian [b.1936], Detroit, MI, 1983; purchased by Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art, Bentonville, AR, 2006
On ViewYes
This artwork's face covers about 7.0× the area of a standard movie poster.Drawn to the same scale.