The Museum is closed today, February 5, due to inclement weather. All programs scheduled for today are canceled.

Ludwig Dill (German, 1848-1940)

Birkenwald (Birch Grove)

  • Date: ca. 1900
  • Medium: Oil on canvas
  • Object Dimensions: 28 1/2 x 36 1/8 in. (72.39 x 91.76 cm)
  • Credit Line: Founding Collection, Gift of Charles and Emma Frye, 1952.037
  • Photo Credit: Spike Mafford

Franz-Xaver Hoch (German, 1869-1916)

Landscape with Church Towers

  • Date: 1912
  • Medium: Oil on canvas
  • Object Dimensions: 43 1/2 x 45 in. (110.49 x 114.3 cm)
  • Credit Line: Founding Collection, Gift of Charles and Emma Frye, 1952.071
  • Photo Credit: Jueqian Fang

Franz von Lenbach (German, 1836-1904)

Helmuth, Count von Moltke

  • Date: 1873
  • Medium: Oil on canvas
  • Object Dimensions: 46 3/4 x 34 in. (118.75 x 86.36 cm)
  • Credit Line: Founding Collection, Gift of Charles and Emma Frye, 1952.091
  • Photo Credit: Jueqian Fang

Wilhelm Trübner (German, 1851-1917)

Drei Tannen in Schloss Hemsbach (Three Fir Trees at Castle Hemsbach)

  • Date: 1904
  • Medium: Oil on canvas
  • Object Dimensions: 31 x 36 1/4 in. (78.74 x 92.08 cm)
  • Credit Line: Founding Collection, Gift of Charles and Emma Frye, 1952.173
  • Photo Credit: Spike Mafford
  • Verbal Description: Three dark brown tree trunks and a band of verdant shrubbery are positioned in front of a large, white building in this lush landscape painting. A clear, cerulean sky peaks through the coniferous tree canopy. A sunny, lime-colored lawn with a pink flower bed is at the center of the composition. Most of the building is obstructed by the trees, and all that is seen between the middle and far right tree trunks is a tower, five stories high, with two rectangular windows side-by-side on every floor. This painting is representational, but the brushstrokes are textured, and short dashes of paint and flecks of color make up the landscape, giving the painting an overall impressionistic feeling.

Franz von Stuck (German, 1863-1928)

Urteil des Paris (The Judgment of Paris)

  • Date: 1923
  • Medium: Oil on panel
  • Object Dimensions: 28 3/8 x 39 1/2 x 1/2 in. (72.07 x 100.33 x 1.27 cm)
  • Credit Line: Founding Collection, Gift of Charles and Emma Frye, 1952.168

Louis Moeller (American, 1855-1930)

A Critical Point in the Game

  • Date: ca. 1903
  • Medium: Oil on canvas
  • Object Dimensions: 18 1/8 x 24 1/4 in. (46.04 x 61.6 cm)
  • Credit Line: Founding Collection, Gift of Charles and Emma Frye, 1952.121
  • Photo Credit: Jueqian Fang

Nikolai Nikanorovich Dubovskoi (Russian, 1859-1918)

Seascape with Figures

  • Date: 1899
  • Medium: Oil on canvas
  • Object Dimensions: 65 1/8 x 56 in. (165.42 x 142.24 cm)
  • Credit Line: Founding Collection, Gift of Charles and Emma Frye, 1952.039
  • Photo Credit: Jueqian Fang

Franz von Lenbach (German, 1836-1904)

Marion Lenbach and the Daughter of the Painter Nikolaus Gysis

  • Date: 1899
  • Medium: Oil on paper mounted on board
  • Object Dimensions: 38 x 29 1/8 x 9/16 in. (96.52 x 73.98 x 1.43 cm)
  • Credit Line: Founding Collection, Gift of Charles and Emma Frye, 1952.101
  • Photo Credit: Jueqian Fang

Pieter van Veen (American, born the Netherlands, 1875-1961)

First Snow

  • Date: ca. 1914
  • Medium: Oil on canvas
  • Object Dimensions: 15 x 21 3/16 in. (38.1 x 53.82 cm)
  • Credit Line: Founding Collection, Gift of Charles and Emma Frye, 1952.179
  • Photo Credit: Jueqian Fang
  • Verbal Description: This is a painting of a winter day. The clear, pastel blue sky takes up about three-quarters of the composition and a flat landscape occupies the bottom quarter. Two steel-colored, meandering rivers flank either side of a snow-covered path that dissects the ground vertically into two equal halves. Moving from left to right along the horizon line: a golden triangle of long grasses line the wider of the two rivers and a sliver of gold lines the right bank. At the center is the snow-covered path moving back towards the horizon line. A dark shape off in the distance has just enough details to see that it’s a figure. Just beyond this traveling figure is a light gray rhombus, likely the roof of a house. Moving further to the right along the horizon line are three leafless trees, all about the same height, poking above another house. The second river runs next to this structure with the same golden strips along either side. At the right side of this bank, touching the right side of the painting, is another building. It’s closer than the others. There are no windows, it has dark gray walls and a light gray roof.

Ludwig Knaus (German, 1829-1910)

Drove of Swine: Evening Effect

  • Date: 1878
  • Medium: Oil on canvas
  • Object Dimensions: 19 5/8 x 14 3/8 in. (49.85 x 36.51 cm)
  • Credit Line: Founding Collection, Gift of Charles and Emma Frye, 1952.085
  • Photo Credit: Jueqian Fang
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