# AC559 - 11/2/1967, USA Postcard, #1335 The Biglin Brothers Racing
Postcard and Stamp Feature Same National Gallery of Art Painting
Artist Thomas Easkins' painting, "The Biglin Brothers Racing," is featured on this postcard and its stamp. The original painting hangs in the National Gallery of Art in Washington, DC. A First Day of Issue postmark ties the stamp to the postcard. American Painter Thomas Eakins portrayed scenes on canvas with photographic brilliance.
Birth Of Thomas Eakins
As a child, Eakins watched his father, a writing master and calligraphy teacher, work. By the time he was 12, he was skilled in line drawing and had an excellent grasp of perspective. Eakins also enjoyed athletics such as rowing, ice-skating, swimming, wrestling, and gymnastics. He would later paint these activities and encourage his students to do them.
Under Eakins’ leadership, the school’s art program was one of the most “liberal and advanced in the world.” However, it wasn’t without its controversy. For some time, some of the younger professors had wanted to remove him and assume control of the school themselves. This created a rift between Eakins and the board of directors. After he removed the loincloth of a male model in a class of female students, he was forced to resign in 1886. Some of the students, however, sided with Eakins and formed their own school, the Art Students’ League of Philadelphia. Eakins went on to teach at other schools including the Art Students League of New York, the National Academy of Design, the Cooper Union, and the Art Students’ Guild.
During his earlier studies in Europe, Eakins had witnessed how the French realists used photography in their painting studies. At the time in America, it was looked down on as a shortcut. But Eakins was fascinated by it and conducted a number of motion studies, including some with famed photographer Eadweard Muybridge. While Muybridge would capture multiple separate images to be displayed on his movie projector, Eakins captured precise movements in the same negative. He would use these as the basis for his paintings, enabling them to be very lifelike.
Postcard and Stamp Feature Same National Gallery of Art Painting
Artist Thomas Easkins' painting, "The Biglin Brothers Racing," is featured on this postcard and its stamp. The original painting hangs in the National Gallery of Art in Washington, DC. A First Day of Issue postmark ties the stamp to the postcard. American Painter Thomas Eakins portrayed scenes on canvas with photographic brilliance.
Birth Of Thomas Eakins
As a child, Eakins watched his father, a writing master and calligraphy teacher, work. By the time he was 12, he was skilled in line drawing and had an excellent grasp of perspective. Eakins also enjoyed athletics such as rowing, ice-skating, swimming, wrestling, and gymnastics. He would later paint these activities and encourage his students to do them.
Under Eakins’ leadership, the school’s art program was one of the most “liberal and advanced in the world.” However, it wasn’t without its controversy. For some time, some of the younger professors had wanted to remove him and assume control of the school themselves. This created a rift between Eakins and the board of directors. After he removed the loincloth of a male model in a class of female students, he was forced to resign in 1886. Some of the students, however, sided with Eakins and formed their own school, the Art Students’ League of Philadelphia. Eakins went on to teach at other schools including the Art Students League of New York, the National Academy of Design, the Cooper Union, and the Art Students’ Guild.
During his earlier studies in Europe, Eakins had witnessed how the French realists used photography in their painting studies. At the time in America, it was looked down on as a shortcut. But Eakins was fascinated by it and conducted a number of motion studies, including some with famed photographer Eadweard Muybridge. While Muybridge would capture multiple separate images to be displayed on his movie projector, Eakins captured precise movements in the same negative. He would use these as the basis for his paintings, enabling them to be very lifelike.