Wisteria on a Wall
Fidelia Bridges
American Art
The practice of drawing and painting in watercolor was an important part of genteel female culture in the nineteenth century. Fidelia Bridges, a Brooklynite, achieved uncommon success as a professional artist, becoming well known for her detailed and decorative watercolors of flowers and birds. Bridges’s close observation of plant life—a subject especially favored by the American Ruskinians—is demonstrated in this carefully articulated study of a sturdy climbing vine, whose sinuous profile was perhaps studied from a window, and in the nearby precise study of a calla lily.
MEDIUM
Watercolor over graphite on paper
DATES
1870s
ACCESSION NUMBER
85.225
CREDIT LINE
Gift of Mr. and Mrs. O. Kelley Anderson, Jr.
MUSEUM LOCATION
This item is not on view
CAPTION
Fidelia Bridges (American, 1834â1923). Wisteria on a Wall, 1870s. Watercolor over graphite on paper, 14 x 10 1/16 in. (35.6 x 25.6 cm). Brooklyn Museum, Gift of Mr. and Mrs. O. Kelley Anderson, Jr., 85.225 (Photo: Brooklyn Museum, 85.225_PS6.jpg)
IMAGE
overall, 85.225_PS6.jpg. Brooklyn Museum photograph, 2011
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