Details

Date

1929–1930

Medium

Tempera and varnish on cardboard

Dimensions

20 3/8 x 36 inches

Accession #

49.32

Location

Stent Family Wing, Level 3, Gallery 308

Credit

Purchase with funds from the Fine Arts Collectors and the 20th-Century Art Acquisition Fund and gift of the Pollitzer Family in honor of Anita Pollitzer, to whom the artist originally gave this work, 1996.18

Famous for his biblical paintings, Henry Ossawa Tanner painted Destruction of Sodom and Gomorrah after two trips to Palestine. He used his favorite hue, the distinctive greenish-blue color dominating the sky, to portray the smoky conflagration engulfing the two cities. The painting’s abstraction and simplicity of form evoke a sense of interaction between the physical and spiritual worlds. Tanner downplays the presence of Lot and his daughters, barely visible at the lower right. His blend of tempera and oil unifies the composition and imparts an almost unearthly luminosity.

Image Copyright

© Georgia O'Keeffe Museum/Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York

Details

Date

1929–1930

Medium

Tempera and varnish on cardboard

Dimensions

20 3/8 x 36 inches

Accession #

49.32

Location

Currently not on view