1998
DOI: 10.1086/496743
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Eakins, Race, and Ethnographic Ambivalence

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Cited by 10 publications
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“…Less complex than Eakins's design and lacking its intense observation and seriousness, Kemble's unpublished watercolor focuses on a single dominant figure sharing the foreground with large cotton blossoms—a harmless stereotype. This example of genteel sentimentality—what most viewers today would call a charming, if vacuous image—may explain how some of Kemble's contemporaries perceived him as a sympathetic portrayer of black Americans (Braddock 137).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Less complex than Eakins's design and lacking its intense observation and seriousness, Kemble's unpublished watercolor focuses on a single dominant figure sharing the foreground with large cotton blossoms—a harmless stereotype. This example of genteel sentimentality—what most viewers today would call a charming, if vacuous image—may explain how some of Kemble's contemporaries perceived him as a sympathetic portrayer of black Americans (Braddock 137).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%