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Across the Lake

George Grosz

American Art

By the time he immigrated to the United States in 1932, George Grosz had spent a decade painting shocking figure subjects that indicted the dissipated society and corrupt regime of Weimar Germany and led to his condemnation by Hitler’s Nazi government. Once in this country, Grosz freed himself to paint landscapes and took up watercolor. In that medium he began to experience the pure pleasure of painting with a liberated, almost calligraphic touch bearing no relation to the lurid tones and laboriously worked surfaces of his German oil paintings.
MEDIUM Watercolor on slightly textured, moderately thick, beige wove paper
DATES 1939
DIMENSIONS Sheet: 19 5/8 x 15 3/8 in. (49.8 x 39.1 cm) Frame: 29 7/8 x 24 x 1 9/16 in. (75.9 x 61 x 4 cm)  (show scale)
SIGNATURE Signed lower right: "Grosz / TRURO 39"
COLLECTIONS American Art
ACCESSION NUMBER 41.515
CREDIT LINE Dick S. Ramsay Fund
MUSEUM LOCATION This item is not on view
CAPTION George Grosz (American, born Germany, 1893–1959). Across the Lake, 1939. Watercolor on slightly textured, moderately thick, beige wove paper, Sheet: 19 5/8 x 15 3/8 in. (49.8 x 39.1 cm). Brooklyn Museum, Dick S. Ramsay Fund, 41.515. © artist or artist's estate (Photo: Brooklyn Museum, 41.515_PS2.jpg)
IMAGE overall, 41.515_PS2.jpg. Brooklyn Museum photograph, 2006
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RIGHTS STATEMENT © artist or artist's estate
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