Edmund Charles Tarbell
Mary and New Castle Poppy
1925
Scroll
Edmund Charles Tarbell
Mary and New Castle Poppy
1925
Physical Qualities
Oil on canvas, Framed: 56 x 36 1/2 x 3 3/4 in. (142.2 x 92.7 x 9.5 cm) Sight: 49 3/8 x 29 3/8 in. (125.4 x 74.6 cm)
Credit Line
Mrs. Hugh J. Chisholm Fund
Object Number
1975.46
Edmund Tarbell painted his youngest daughter Mary Tarbell Schaffer (1897-1991) standing with one of the family's three horses, New Castle Poppy. Schaffer was an accomplished rider and horsewoman, and Tarbell was determined to depict her mastery. She wears a competitive riding outfit, and her horsemanship skills are evident from the positioning of her hands on the horse, lead, and crop.
Schaffer was progressive and independent. During the 1920s, when only a small percentage of women were driving automobiles, she drove her father to his appointments to paint President Herbert Hoover's portrait. Tarbell was a founding member of The Ten, a group of American Impressionists working in what was then considered a radical style of gestural, brightly toned painting.
Currier Gallery of Art, Manchester, New Hampshire, 'Impressionism Transformed: The Paintings of Edmund C. Tarbell,' October 13, 2001 - January 7, 2002; tour to Delaware Art Museum, Wilmington, Delaware, February 2, 2002 - April 13, 2002; Terra Museum of American Art, Chicago, Illinois, May 11, 2002 - July 20, 2002.
Susan Strickler, 'The Paintings of Edmund C. Tarbell,' The American Art Review (September-October 2001), vol. XIII, no. 5, p. 180.