On view

American Art
Wilmerding Pavilion
Philip & Nancy Anschutz Gallery

The Home of the Heron,

1891

George Inness, 1825–1894; born Newburgh, NY; died Bridge of Allan, Scotland
y1943-93

At the edge of a forest, along the banks of a stream, a heron stares into the water in search of prey. If Inness had some spot in the northeastern United States in mind when he painted The Home of the Heron, we can be confident that our bird is a great blue heron (Ardea herodias). The coppery foliage tells us it is autumn. Sometime soon, as the nights get colder, that heron will unfold its massive wings, squawk loudly, and lift itself into the sky. It will travel south, perhaps to the Caribbean, where it will assume its alternate identity as a tropical bird until springtime beckons it back to that obscure stream at the edge of that northeastern forest.

David S. Wilcove, Professor of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology and Public Affairs and the High Meadows Environmental Institute, Princeton University

More Context

Campus Voices

Handbook Entry

Information

Title
The Home of the Heron
Dates

1891

Medium
Oil on canvas
Dimensions
107 × 94 cm (42 1/8 × 37 in.) frame: 138.1 × 123.8 × 13.3 cm (54 3/8 × 48 3/4 × 5 1/4 in.)
Credit Line
Gift of Victor Stephen Harris, Class of 1940, and David Harris, Class of 1944, in memory of their father, Victor Harris
Object Number
y1943-93
Place Made

North America, United States, New Jersey, Montclair

Signatures
Signed and dated: "G. Inness 1891", lower left.
Culture
Materials

Thomas B. Clarke, New York, NY; Charles L. Freer, Detroit, MI, ca. 1891; (consigned to Macbeth Gallery, 1893-1901); (consigned to Newman E. Montross, New York, NY, 1905); Joseph G. Snydacker, Chicago, ca. 1912; (sale, Anderson Galleries, New York, NY [Snydacker sale], March 17, 1922, no. 36); Victor Harris, New York, NY (acquired at auction, 1922)