
George Bellows
Bellows, George Wesley
American, 1882 - 1925
George Bellows was born in Columbus, Ohio, on August 12, 1882, the only child of a successful building contractor from Sag Harbor, Long Island, New York. He entered Ohio State University in 1901, where he played baseball and basketball and made drawings for college publications. He dropped out of college in 1904, went to New York, and studied under Robert Henri at the New York School of Art, where Edward Hopper, Rockwell Kent, and Guy Péne du Bois were his classmates. A superb technician who worked in a confident, painterly style, Bellows soon established himself as the most important realist of his generation. He created memorable images of club fights, street urchins swimming in the East River, and the Pennsylvania Station excavation site and garnered praise from both progressive and conservative critics. In 1909 he became one of the youngest artists ever admitted as an associate member of the National Academy of Design.
In 1910 Bellows began teaching at the Art Students League and married Emma Story, by whom he had two daughters. After 1910 Bellows gradually abandoned the stark urban realism and dark palette characteristic of his early work and gravitated toward painting landscapes, seascapes, and portraits. His style changed as he explored the color theories of Hardesty Maratta and Denman Ross, and later Jay Hambidge’s compositional system of dynamic symmetry.
Bellows helped organize the Armory Show in 1913, in which five of his paintings and a number of drawings were included. That year he was elected a full member of the National Academy of Design. He had leftist political views and contributed illustrations to the Socialist publication The Masses from 1912 to 1917. Bellows began to make lithographs in 1916, and his exceptional talent engendered a revival of interest in the medium. He worked in Maine, in Carmel, California, and in Middletown, Rhode Island, and was a founding member of the Society of Independent Artists and a charter member of the Association of American Painters and Sculptors. In 1919 he taught at the Art Institute of Chicago. After painting the landscape near Woodstock, New York, in 1920, he bought a house there the following year. He died of appendicitis in New York on January 8, 1925, at the age of 42.
Bellows, who never went to Europe, is regarded as a quintessential American artist whose vigorous style enabled him to explore a wide range of subjects from scenes of modern urban life to portraits of his daughters, to turbulent Maine seascapes. As an early biographer noted, Bellows “caught the brute force of the prize fighter, the ruggedness of the country pasture, the essence of childhood and recorded them appropriately not only for his own generation but for all time.”[1]
[1] [Frederick A. Sweet], George Bellows: Paintings, Drawings and Prints (Art Institute of Chicago, IL, 1946).
Explore Selected Works
See all 88 works of artArtwork

Study for Nude with Hexagonal Quilt
Study for Nude with Hexagonal Quilt
George Bellows · 1924 · charcoal and black crayon on wove paper mounted to paperboard · Accession ID 1986.82.1
Artwork

Woodstock Road, Woodstock, New York
Woodstock Road, Woodstock, New York
George Bellows · 1924 · black crayon on wove paper · Accession ID 1983.1.81
Artwork

Nude with Hexagonal Quilt
Nude with Hexagonal Quilt
George Bellows · 1924 · oil on canvas · Accession ID 1983.1.4
Artwork

Study for "Mr. and Mrs. Philip Wase"
Study for "Mr. and Mrs. Philip Wase"
George Bellows · 1924 · black conté crayon on wove paper · Accession ID 1983.1.74
Artwork

The Actress
The Actress
George Bellows, Bolton Brown · 1923 - 1924 · lithograph on wove Basingwerk paper · Accession ID 2024.138.2
Artwork

Dempsey through the Ropes
Dempsey through the Ropes
George Bellows · 1923-1924 · lithograph in black · Accession ID 1956.6.6
Artwork

Lychnis and Her Sons
Lychnis and Her Sons
George Bellows · 1923 · lithograph in black · Accession ID 1983.1.85
Artwork

Sixteen East Gay Street
Sixteen East Gay Street
George Bellows · 1923-1924 · lithograph in black · Accession ID 1983.1.89
Artwork

Allan Donn Puts to Sea
Allan Donn Puts to Sea
George Bellows · 1923 · lithograph in black on wove paper · Accession ID 1983.1.82
Bibliography
1965
Morgan, Charles W. George Bellows: Painter of America. New York, 1965.
1992
Mason, Lauris, assisted by Joan Ludman. The Lithographs of George Bellows: A Catalogue Raisonne. Millwood, New York, 1977.
Quick, Michael, Jane Myers, Marianne Doezema, and Franklin Kelly. The Paintings of George Bellows. Exh. cat. Los Angeles County Museum of Art; Whitney Museum of American Art, New York; Columbus (Ohio) Museum of Art; Amon Carter Museum, Fort Worth. Fort Worth, 1992.
2009
Peck, Glenn C. George Bellows' Catalogue Raisonné. H.V. Allison & Co. URL: http://www.hvallison.com. Accessed 16 August 2016.
2012
Brock, Charles. George Bellows. Exh. cat. National Gallery of Art, Washington; The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York; Royal Academy of Arts, London. Washington, 2012.