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Mischief
Public Domain

William Sergeant Kendall

Mischief

1907

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William Sergeant Kendall

Mischief

1907

Physical Qualities Oil on canvas, Framed: 53 × 46 in. (134.6 × 116.8 cm.) Unframed: 38 × 31 in. (96.5 × 78.7 cm.)
Credit Line Gift of Dr. Alfred R. L. Dohme, Baltimore
Object Number 1914.1.1
William Sergeant Kendall was one of few American artists of his time to fuse the realism of his teacher, Thomas Eakins, with a classical approach to the figure. Kendall gained fame for evocative scenes of domestic life using members of his family as subjects. Here, his little daughter seems to be expressing a mind of her own. Mischief is the very first work accessioned by the fledgling Baltimore Museum of Art in 1914. The donor, Alfred R. L. Dohme (1867 – 1952), was a chemist who founded the pharmaceutical company Sharpe & Dohme, later Merck, Sharpe & Dohme. Dohme’s daughter, too, had a mind of her own. Adelyn Dohme Breeskin became the first woman to direct a major American art museum when she took over the leadership of the Baltimore Museum of Art in 1947.
The Baltimore Museum of Art by gift, 1914; Dr. Alfred Robert Lewis Dohme (1867 - 1952), Baltimore, MD
BMA, "Diamonds in the Rough: Seldom Seen Objects from the BMA's Collection," June 20-August 13, 1989.

Artist

William Sergeant Kendall

1868–1937

American, 1869-1938
Meet William Sergeant Kendall

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