Arts and Entertainment

Palmer Museum of Art announces major show on Ashcan School artist John Sloan

John Sloan, "Red Kimono on the Roof," 1912, oil on canvas, 24 x 20 inches. Indianapolis Museum of Art at Newfields, James E. Roberts Fund, 54.55. Credit: John SloanAll Rights Reserved.

UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. — The Palmer Museum of Art at Penn State is organizing a major loan exhibition on American artist John Sloan. "From the Rooftops: John Sloan and the Art of a New Urban Space" will be on view at the Palmer from Feb. 3 to May 12, before traveling to the Hyde Collection in Glens Falls, New York, where it will be on view from June 16 through Sept. 15.

Ashcan School painter John Sloan (1871–1951) was preoccupied with the New York City rooftop perhaps more than any other American artist in the first half of the 20th century. This setting factors in some of his most iconic and celebrated works, many of which focus on immigrant and working-class subjects. The Ashcan School was a artistic movement depicting daily life in New York City. 

“These wonderful roofs of New York City bring me all humanity,” Sloan was quoted as saying in 1919. “It is all the world.”

“'From the Rooftops' continues the Palmer Museum’s impressive record of producing seminal exhibitions and new scholarship in the field of American art,” said Erin Coe, director of the Palmer Museum of Art. “It’s been a quarter-century since we hosted a major exhibition devoted to the art of the Ashcan School, making this project even more relevant and timely, especially given the Palmer’s longstanding history of collecting the works of John Sloan and his colleagues.”

This loan exhibition offers the first in-depth examination of Sloan’s career-long fascination with the life of the urban rooftop by bringing together nearly 30 of his paintings, prints and drawings.

“This exhibition explores an exciting and overlooked aspect of artist John Sloan’s career,” said Adam Thomas, curator of American art at the Palmer and curator of the exhibition. “We are pleased to share significant works in a variety of media from museums and private collections across the country.”  

"From the Rooftops" expands on the visual culture of “the city above the city” by featuring 30 additional works from more than a dozen notable contemporaries of Sloan. The changing fabric of the metropolis enabled new aesthetic and leisure possibilities up high, such as the roof garden entertainments painted by William Glackens and Charles Hoffbauer just after the turn of the century. Cecil Bell, Reginald Marsh, and Louis Ribak studied with Sloan and later depicted varied rooftop locales in the 1930s. Nocturnal scenes by printmakers Martin Lewis and Armin Landeck, candid photographs by Walter Rosenblum and Weegee, and surrealist-inflected paintings by George Ault and Hughie Lee-Smith are among the varied examples complementing and contextualizing the story of Sloan’s sustained interest in rooftop spaces.

“Featuring Sloan’s masterful treatments of elevated urban environments in New York City alongside the work of important contemporaries offers the opportunity to consider afresh the legacy of the Ashcan School and the experience of a vital part of the city in the early decades of the last century,” added Thomas.

The exhibition is generously sponsored by Steven and Stephanie Wasser. Additional support is provided by the Terra Art Enrichment Fund, the George Dewey and Mary J. Krumrine Endowment, and the Pennsylvania Council on the Arts.

Organized by the Palmer Museum of Art, "From the Rooftops" will be accompanied by a publication with an essay by Thomas, who is also affiliate assistant professor in the Department of Art History at Penn State. He is a contributing author to the exhibition catalogs "Wild Spaces, Open Seasons: Hunting and Fishing in American Art" (2016) and "Bold, Cautious, True: Walt Whitman and American Art of the Civil War Era" (2009).

Related programming 

Gallery Talk
"From the Rooftops: John Sloan and the Art of a New Urban Space"
Adam Thomas, curator of American art
12:10 p.m. Friday, Feb. 8

Family Day
"Inside/Outside the City"
Noon to 3 p.m. Saturday, Feb. 9

Enjoy brief, family-friendly guided tours and art activities. These programs are ideal for families with children ages 5-11, but all ages are welcome. Explore new heights on a guided tour of "From the Rooftops: John Sloan and the Art of a New Urban Space," then create a picture that imagines a home and cityscape.

American Art Lecture 
“'Loftiness'” and Early New York Skyscrapers”
Craig Zabel, associate professor of art history
4:30 p.m. Tuesday, Feb. 19

The “loftiness” of the early skyscrapers of New York City in the late 19th and early 20th centuries provided modern urban life with many new sensations and experiences. This talk will explore such issues as capitalist battles to build the tallest skyscraper, the architectural celebration of height, rooms in the sky (executive suites to public observatories), and the artistic response to urban towers.

Pop-up exhibition and Gallery Talk
"John Sloan and His Circle"
Adam Thomas, curator of American art
Friday, March 29
Pop-up — 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.
Gallery Talk — 12:10 p.m.

Gallery Talk
"From the Rooftops: John Sloan and the Art of a New Urban Space"
Ethan Robey, associate teaching professor of art history
12:10 p.m. Friday, April 5

About the Palmer Museum of Art

The Palmer Museum of Art on the Penn State University Park campus is a free-admission arts resource for the University and surrounding communities in central Pennsylvania. With a collection of 9,000 objects representing and spanning a variety of cultures and centuries of art, the Palmer is the largest art museum between Pittsburgh and Philadelphia. Areas of strength include the museum’s collection of American art from the late 18th century to the present; Old Master paintings; prints and photography; ceramics and studio glass; and a growing collection of modern and contemporary art. The museum presents 10 exhibitions each year and, with 11 galleries, a print-study room, a 150-seat auditorium, and an outdoor sculpture garden, the Palmer Museum of Art is the leading cultural resource for the region.

Museum hours are 10 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Tuesday through Saturday; noon to 4 p.m. on Sundays; and 6 to 9 p.m. on Third Thursdays. The museum is closed Mondays and some holidays.

The Palmer receives state arts funding support through a grant from the Pennsylvania Council on the Arts, a state agency funded by the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania.

For more information on the Palmer Museum of Art or for the calendar of upcoming events, visit palmermuseum.psu.edu.

Last Updated January 8, 2019

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