George Benjamin Luks (American, 1867-1933). Old Salt, 1909, Height: 55.8 cm (21.97 in.), Width: 45.7 cm (17.99 in.) Private collection
The Red List
The Chef at Luchow's by George Luks, (American 1867-1933)
George Luks | Sketches of Children | The Met
Ashcan School – George Luks part 1
Continuing the intermittent theme on the New York "Ashcan School" (see Introduction 4 Oct 2012, William Glackens 6 Oct - 14 Oct 2012, Robert Henri 22 Oct - 1 Nov 2012) the next artist I'm featuring is George Luks. George Luks by Robert Henri 1904 oil on canvas 194 x 97 cm George Benjamin Luks (1867-1933) was a pioneer realist, a member of "The Eight," and a vigorous opponent of academic and conservative standards in subject matter. He was born in Williamsport, Pa. in 1867. In about 1884 he…
Search Result Details - Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden | Smithsonian
The Paintrist Files
the-paintrist - Posts tagged the eight
Mike the Bite
Collection information about Mike the Bite;
Collection - Asheville Art Museum
George Luks · Winter Night, New York, c.1930. Gouache Painting
George Luks | Two Seated Figures | American | The Metropolitan Museum of Art
[unknown] Luks [Ashcan]. Luks also did the Yellow Kid comic strip for awhile.
George Luks | 265 Artworks | MutualArt
Find artworks by George Luks (American, 1867 - 1933) on MutualArt and find more works from galleries, museums and auction houses worldwide.
Ashcan School - George Luks part 4
George Benjamin Luks (1867-1933) was an American realist artist and illustrator. His vigorously painted genre paintings of urban subjects are examples of the Ashcan School in American art. For biographical notes on Luks see part 1. For earlier works see parts 1 - 3. This is part 4 of a 4-part post on the works of George Luks. Note: All the works in this final post on Luks are undated, so will be shown out of date sequence: Concierge crayon on paper 16.9 x 11 cm Girl with Basket of Food oil…
The Romance of Ironing?
Young Girl Ironing by Louis Leopold Boilly, 1761-1845. Very few women I know like to iron, and quite a few hate it. So I have found it odd that, relatively speaking, there are a lot of paintings of women ironing--in contrast to the total dearth of paintings of women housecleaning (except for the Dutch). I infer from this that men care more about clean clothes than they do a clean house. Most paintings of women ironing are from France, and this may be because the French laundry was considered…
Antiques Roadshow | PBS
Check out Debra Force's ANTIQUES ROADSHOW appraisal of this George Luks Watercolor, ca. 1925 from Phoenix, Hour 1!