The Avenue in the Rain

The Avenue in the Rain is a 1917 oil painting by the American Impressionist painter Childe Hassam. It depicts Fifth Avenue in New York City in the rain, draped with US flags. The painting is one of six works by Hassam in the permanent art collection of the White House in Washington DC.

The Avenue in the Rain, 1917
Barack Obama working at the Resolute desk in the Oval Office in 2009, with the painting to his right

Between 1916 and 1919, Hassam completed around 30 paintings of streets decorated with flags. This work dates to February 1917, shortly before the US joined the First World War, at a time when patriotic fervour was rising in the US. The previous month, Germany extended its unrestricted submarine warfare to neutral ships, including vessels bearing the US flag. The Zimmermann Telegram became public knowledge at the end of February 1917, and the US declared war on Germany on 6 April 1917.

The painting measures 42 by 22.25 inches (106.7 cm × 56.5 cm) and is dominant by red and blue and whites tones, representing the stars and stripes. Several dark figures in the middle distance hold umbrellas, and while the far distance fades into the blue background. The flags seem to float in mid-air, flying from poles that project out from the buildings on the street, but the buildings are not visible. The flags and human figures are reflected on the wet street and sidewalk. Hassam may have been influenced by two similar works of Claude Monet depicting national celebrations in Paris on 30 June 1878.

It was donated to the White House in 1963 by Thomas Mellon Evans and hung between the windows in John F. Kennedy's blue-themed President's Bedroom (now a private sitting room, adjacent to the Yellow Oval Room on the second floor), and then in the President's Dining Room for many years. It hung in the Oval Office during Bill Clinton, Barack Obama, and Donald Trump’s terms.

Monet

Other works by Childe Hassam with flags, 1916-1919

gollark: Maybe I should try to make a list of "definitely wrong guesses" as well as my "hopefully right guesses".
gollark: Since it does actually depend on the round.
gollark: I don't know if LyricLy calculated right, though.
gollark: Indeed. You would actually need to be quite competent at guessing to consistently guess everything wrong.
gollark: I assumed it was you, using assumption lasers.

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.