
Catalogue
- Year
- 1939
- Medium
- Gelatin silver print
- Dimensions
- 6 5/8 × 9 5/8" (16.8 × 24.4 cm)
- Collection
- Museum of Modern Art
- Artist
- Charles Sheeler
Artist

Painting
A leading figure of the Precisionist movement of the 1920s – 30s, Charles Sheeler is known for his crisply-articulated interpretations of the modernizing American landscape, from the urban monoliths of the New York City skyline to the sprawling factories of the industrial Midwest. In his carefully balanced compositions, Sheeler explored aesthetic and conceptual tension, chiefly between abstraction and representation; objectivity and subjectivity; painting and photography; and the past and present. Sheeler employed a novel process for creating paintings based on his photographs, once observing: “Photography records inalterably the single image, while painting records a plurality of images willfully directed by the artist.” The process-driven dialogue between media and object endures as one of Sheeler’s greatest contributions to American modernism.
Full artist profile →More
More by Charles Sheeler
Sun, Rocks, Trees #2
1959 · Gouache with graphite, on cream laminate board
Western Industrial
1955 · Oil on canvas
Architectural Cadences
1954 · Color screenprint on cream wove paper
Meta-Mold, Cedarburg, Wisconsin
1952 · Gelatin silver print
Beech Tree
1951 · Gelatin silver print
Shaker House, Lebanon, New York
1951 · Gelatin silver print
Record
Verified by WattsOS- Artist
- Charles Sheeler
- Year
- 1939
- Medium
- Gelatin silver print
- Dimensions
- 6 5/8 × 9 5/8" (16.8 × 24.4 cm)
- Watts ID
- WW-1939-M038813
Source
- Collection
- Museum of Modern Art
- Source
- moma
- Reference
- View at source
- Status
- verified





