Study for "Science Instructing Industry"

Kenyon Cox American

Not on view

Cox created multiple preparatory studies for his oil painting Science Instructing Industry (1898; Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland) (see also 50.101.2 and 50.101.3). Committed to precision, the painter used a grid system to ensure that the composition was properly proportioned, an important skill he developed during his student years at the École des Beaux-Arts in Paris. Even though the female figure is covered with drapery in the finished oil, Cox still followed conventional practice of completing a nude study before draping the figure. Like other painters associated with the American Renaissance, Cox contrived to let the female form assume various allegorical guises by simply changing the props, setting, or title according to the requirements of a project.

Study for "Science Instructing Industry", Kenyon Cox (American, Warren, Ohio 1856–1919 New York), Graphite on off-white laid paper; mounted on Egyptian linen, American

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