Object Record
Images
Metadata
Object Name |
Painting |
Catalog Number |
2018.113.1 |
Creator |
Sawyier, Paul, 1865-1917 |
Date |
ca. 1900 |
Material(s) |
Paper/Paint |
Dimensions |
H-11 W-16.5 inches |
Description |
This is a watercolor painting by Paul Sawyier. It is part of the "The Two Villages" series. The watercolor is pasted to a paper board. The painting show a white man facing the viewer. He is situated in the center of the painting. He is wearing a straw colored hat, white shirt, blue pants and knee high black boots. The boots have a brown trim around the top. The man has a gray bag slung across his chest. The man is shown walking down a dirt road. On either side of the image of the man are either haystacks. On the lower left (as you look at the painting) there are what appears to be two bundles of hemp. Under the lower bundle are the initials "P.S.". The sky is blue and there is a stand of green trees in the left and right backgrounds. Under the painting are the words "The Two Villages"/by/ Rose Terry Cook." |
Notes |
This set (2018.113.1-14) was owned by Mary (Mayme) Bull, Paul Sawyier's girlfriend. It is a complement to another set also called "The Two Villages" (1939.698-.716 and 2014.00.217) that is owned by the Kentucky Historical Society. The series of paintings by Sawyier illustrate Rose Terry Cooke's 1860 poem 'The Two Villages,' which contrasts life in a small town with the local cemetery on the hill. Sawyier used scenes from Frankfort and the Frankfort Cemetery. Sawyier did three sets of paintings based on the poem. The first set had agricultural images from a man ploughing to a grim reaper in a field. A common question in regards to this series of paintings is how did Sawyier become familiar with a poem written by a woman in New England? It turns out that the poem "The Two Villages" was published in a supplement to the Frankfort Roundabout on February 16, 1895. A note under the title saying "applicable to Frankfort and her cemetery" was added by the editors. Is this how Sawyier first heard of the poem? Maybe. We may never know exactly how he came to know about the poem but it is very possible that he read it in 1895 and then painted the illustrations later in the decade. |
Collection |
Mary Ann B. Quesenberry Collection |
People |
Sawyier, Paul, 1865-1917 Quesenberry, Mary Ann Bull, Mary Thomas (Mayme) |
Subjects |
Landscape paintings Watercolor paintings Watercolors Hemp Hay |
Search Terms |
Frankfort (Ky.) |
Physical Holder |
Kentucky Historical Society - KHS |