1
●
HENRY OSSAWA TANNER (1859 - 1937)
It Must Be My Very Star, Come Down to Brooklyn,After All
.
Wood engraving on newsprint, circa 1887. 235x165 mm; 9
1
/
4
x6
1
/
2
inches, full margins (disbound sheet).
From Kate Upson Clark,“OldWin-ne-wan’s Star”,
Harper’sYoung People
9, no. 428, p. 185 (January 10,
1888.) Inscribed “One of father’s earliest pictures...sold for 50 dollars” in pencil, lower margin.
Provenance: estate of the artist; collection of Marcia M. Matthews (with her name on a handwritten
label); Richard A. Long, Atlanta; thence by descent to his estate. Historian Marcia M. Matthews
wrote the standard biography on Tanner in 1969.
Exhibited:
The Art of Henry OssawaTanner
, National Collection of Fine Arts, Smithsonian Institution,
Washington, DC, 1969, with the gallery label.
Another impression is in the Free Library of Philadelphia, and was exhibited in the 2012
retrospective,
Henry OssawaTanner - Modern Spirit
, Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts, Philadelphia,
and illustrated in the catalogue.
This is one of the few known examples of Tanner’s early graphic work - this illustration was made
while he attended the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts. Tanner tried his hand at illustration to
make some additional income - he could earn $40-50 for a picture sold to NewYork publishers.
Here Tanner was commissioned to illustrate a scene from a short story in which a girl visits her
former pet, a deer, at the Brooklyn zoo. Marley pp. 20 and 175.
[1,000/1,500]