Open daily. Always free.
Chicago River, North Branch

Chicago River, North Branch

On View

Not currently on view

John Francis Murphy

Born in Oswego, New York, John Francis Murphy moved with his family to Chicago in 1868. He studied at the Chicago Academy of Design for a short period. In 1875 he permanently relocated to New York and first exhibited at the National Academy of Design the following year. Murphy was one of the leading American landscape painters at the turn of the century. His early paintings show influence by the French Barbizon school, but his later, more well-known works are tonalist. The sketch Chicago River, North Branch is an early work by Murphy. It is also one of his few extant works from the Chicago area. In 1874, Murphy traveled from Chicago to the Adirondacks on his first major sketching trip. He returned only briefly to Chicago in 1875 to visit his family before removing to New York. This sketch of the Chicago River is dated October 24, 1875, which means it is one of the last works he created in Chicago. He also finished an oil painting in 1873 titled North Branch, Chicago River, indicating that he enjoyed returning to the scene as a young man.
Artist
John Francis Murphy
(American, 1853 – 1921)
Title
Chicago River, North Branch
Date
1875
Medium
Graphite
Dimensions
8 15/16 x 10 7/8 in. overall
Credit
Gift of D. Frederick Baker from the Baker/Pisano Collection
Accession No.
2021.3.1
Classification
Drawings & Watercolors
Geography
United States

Related

Inherited from the artist by Ada Clifford Murphy (artist’s wife); 1926, sold by Ada Clifford Murphy (New York, NY); by 2001, Spanierman Gallery (New York, NY); 24 September 2020, sold by Rago Arts (Lambertville, NJ) auction [Spanierman Works on Paper sale; lot 520] to D. Frederick Baker (New York, NY); 2020, gifted to the Chazen Museum of Art

The Chazen Museum of Art welcomes comments or inquiries about works in our collection. Please allow two–three weeks for a response. Chazen staff is not able to provide valuations or authentications and such inquiries cannot be answered.

"*" indicates required fields

This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.
Name*