The Chess Players – (Thomas Eakins) Previous Next


Artist:

Date: 1876

Size: 30 x 43 cm

Museum: The Metropolitan Museum of Art (New York, United States Of America)

Technique: Wood

In this painting, the artist’s father watches a chess game between two friends in a Renaissance Revival parlor of a Philadelphia home. Eakins honored his father with a Latin inscription on the drawer of the chess table, which translates as “Benjamin Eakins’s son painted this in ’76.” A reproduction of a painting by Eakins’s principal French teacher, Jean-Léon Gérôme, hangs over the mantel. Eakins adhered to Gérôme’s academic lessons in his careful spatial construction and meticulous detail. In 1881 The Chess Players became the first work to be accepted by the Metropolitan Museum as a gift from a living artist.

This artwork is in the public domain.

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