About the Artwork
Ryder was a reclusive, self-taught artist, whose painting style is both highly personal and very expressionistic. Here Ryder combines two of his favorite themes—his love for the sea and his fascination with Shakespeare. The painting is not a literal scene from “The Tempest,” but a combination of all the major elements from Act 1, Scene 2, placed into one dramatic storm-filled landscape. Ryder reworked the painting for more than twenty years and at one point the artist took a hot poker to the canvas and dragged it through the thickest part of the sky. The painting remained in the artist’s possession until his death.
The Tempest
1892, reworked between 1896 and 1918
Albert Pinkham Ryder
1847-1917
American
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Oil on canvas
Unframed: 27 3/4 × 35 inches (70.5 × 88.9 cm) Framed: 43 5/8 × 51 × 6 1/8 inches (110.8 × 129.5 × 15.6 cm)
Paintings
American Art before 1950
Gift of Dexter M. Ferry, Jr.
50.19
Copyright Not Evaluated
Markings
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Provenance
ca. 1896-1903, Col. Charles Erskine Scott Wood (Portland, Oregon, USA);1918, Wood.
February, 20-32, 1946, sale, John List Crawford and Other Collections, lot 58, Macbeth Gallery, Parke-Bernet (New York, New York, USA).
Dr. Chester. J. Robertson (Pelham Manor, New York, USA);
September 9, 1948, consigned by Robertston to Macbeth Gallery (New York, New York, USA);
1950-present, gift to the Detroit Institute of Arts (Detroit, Michigan, USA)
For more information on provenance, please visit:
Provenance pageExhibition History
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The exhibition history of a number of objects in our collection only begins after their acquisition by the museum, and may reflect an incomplete record.
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Wood, Charles Erskine Scott, to Robert C. Vose, August 9, 1918. Wood papers, The Huntington Library, San Marino, CA.
Exh. cat., Legion of Honor. San Francisco, 1926, no. 159.
Price, Frederic Newlin. Ryder: A Story of Appreciation. New York, 1932, no. 182.
Albert P. Ryder Centenary Exhibition. Exh. cat., Whitney Museum of Art. New York, 1947, no. 46.
Albert Pinkham Ryder. Exh. cat., Corcoran Gallery of Art. Washington, D.C., 1961, no. 52.
A Look at American Landscapes. Exh. cat., Charles MacNider Museum. Mason City, IA, 1966, no. 14 (ill.).
Baltimore, 1976, no. 30.
200 Years of American Painting. Exh. cat., National Museum. Warsaw, 1976 (ill.).
Brown, G.L. “Albert Pinkham Ryder’s Joan of Arc: The Damsel in Distress.” Worchester Art Museum (MA) Journal, 3 (1979-1980): p. 44, no. 9 (ill.).
Homer and Goodrich, 1989, pp. 133-134 and 168-169 (pl. 13).
Broun, 1989, no. 66.
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Credit Line for Reproduction
Albert Pinkham Ryder, The Tempest, 1892, reworked between 1896 and 1918, oil on canvas. Detroit Institute of Arts, Gift of Dexter M. Ferry, Jr., 50.19.
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