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Thesis
Thomas Waterman Wood's Portrayal of Black Citizens During the Early Reconstruction Era
(2014)
  • Tessa Davidson, Harding University
Abstract
During his lifetime, Thomas Waterman Wood (1823-1903) was one of America’s most beloved genre painters. Since his death, very little has been published to document his career and great achievements. Although the exemplary production of his rural genre subjects is enough to demand further attention, an additional oversight is Wood’s unique treatment of African American subjects. Painting during the Reconstruction era when the discourse concerning black citizenship was at its height, Wood created a series of works which portrayed African Americans in a positive light, silently advocating for their rights as U. S. citizens. It is the intent of this thesis to demonstrate Wood’s sensitive portrayal of black citizen by studying both the symbolism and historical context of his paintings with black subjects, particularly his A Bit of War History series and American Citizens (To the Polls). These paintings visually portray the core values that Americans held dearly and advocate for the people Wood considered to be truly “American.”
Keywords
  • African American,
  • Black citizenship,
  • Black subjects in art,
  • Thomas Waterman Wood
Disciplines
Publication Date
Spring May, 2014
Degree
MA
Field of study
Art History
Department
University of Arkansas at Little Rock
Advisor
Floyd W. Martin
Citation Information
Tessa Davidson. "Thomas Waterman Wood's Portrayal of Black Citizens During the Early Reconstruction Era" (2014)
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/tdavidson/2/
Creative Commons license
Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons CC_BY International License.