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Catalog Data

Artist:
Ralston Crawford, born St. Catharines, ON, Canada 1906-died Houston, TX 1978  Search this
Medium:
oil on canvas
Dimensions:
40 1/4 x 50 1/4 in. (102.1 x 127.6 cm.)
Type:
Painting
Date:
1937
Gallery Label:
Beginning in the 1860s, vast reserves of Midwestern grain were shipped across the Great Lakes to Buffalo, where as many as 280 million bushels a year were stored and milled. Crawford intensified the monumental scale and severe beauty of the storehouses by simplifying what he saw into abstract forms. The solid blue tone of the sky becomes a shape all its own, interlocking with the silhouettes of roofs and elevators.
But this painting is more than an artist's exercise. Crawford grew up in the city and shipped aboard Great Lakes freighters with his father. In the late 1930s, Buffalo began to lose its central position in the grain business when Ontario's Welland Canal opened, providing cheaper freight routes to the East Coast. Crawford used chilly colors and raking light to suggest an industrial complex frozen in silence, signaling the end of an era in his hometown.
Topic:
Landscape\New York\Buffalo  Search this
Architecture Exterior\industry\grain elevator  Search this
Credit Line:
Smithsonian American Art Museum, Museum purchase
Object number:
1976.133
Restrictions & Rights:
Usage conditions apply
See more items in:
Smithsonian American Art Museum Collection
Department:
Painting and Sculpture
On View:
Smithsonian American Art Museum, 2nd Floor, North Wing
Data Source:
Smithsonian American Art Museum
GUID:
http://n2t.net/ark:/65665/vk732bf4700-c120-4769-8d5f-75dfe6885169
EDAN-URL:
edanmdm:saam_1976.133