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The Lone Tenement

George Bellows1909

National Gallery of Art, Washington DC

National Gallery of Art, Washington DC
Washington, DC, United States

Like many American artists of his generation, George Bellows was interested in the various urban construction projects that transformed New York City into an ultramodern metropolis. By the time he commenced work on _The Lone Tenement_ in December 1909, he had completed four paintings devoted to the excavation site of the new Pennsylvania Station, culminating in the Gallery’s _Blue Morning_ (painted in March 1909). _The Lone Tenement _represents the nearly complete Blackwell’s Island Bridge (now known as the Ed Koch Queensboro Bridge or 59th Street Bridge), which passes over Blackwell’s Island (now known as Roosevelt Island), linking midtown Manhattan with the borough of Queens. Although the bridge was an impressive engineering feat and a symbol of progress, Bellows chose to focus instead on an abandoned, old tenement building and a group of desultory figures warming themselves by a fire. Such tenement buildings were associated with a host of social ills because of their impoverished and often immigrant residents. Bellows has imbued the composition with a sense of eerie wistfulness, recording the precarious positions of those who were being displaced to make way for the future.


The impact of the painting is strengthened by the artist’s technical mastery. Paint is applied in variety of ways, from passages of thick impasto just to the left of the tenement building to a series of quick calligraphic marks used to describe a group of figures milling outside the building to the right. Bellows’s bold, expressive palette of oranges, golds, and violets, especially evident in the upper left quadrant of the canvas, is also distinctive.

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  • Title: The Lone Tenement
  • Creator: George Bellows
  • Date Created: 1909
  • Physical Dimensions: overall: 91.8 x 122.3 cm (36 1/8 x 48 1/8 in.) framed: 123.2 x 153.4 x 12.7 cm (48 1/2 x 60 3/8 x 5 in.)
  • Provenance: The artist [1882-1925]; by inheritance to his wife, Emma S. Bellows [1884-1959]; purchased 3 February 1945 through (H.V. Allison & Co., New York) by Chester Dale [1883-1962], New York; bequest 1963 to NGA.
  • Medium: oil on canvas
National Gallery of Art, Washington DC

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