Study of George

Skip to main content
Study of George
Study of George
Study of George
TitleStudy of George
Artist (1926 - 2011)
Daten.d.
MediumTempera on Masonite
DimensionsUnframed: 16 × 21 5/8 in. Framed: 25 11/16 × 31 1/16 × 1 3/4 in.
SignedSigned at bottom right: "Robert Vickrey".
SubmissionNA diploma presentation, December 6, 1965
Credit LineNational Academy of Design, New York, NY, Gift of Robert Remsen Vickrey, 1965
Object number1667-P
Label TextRobert Remsen Vickrey is one of a small group of artists, including Andrew Wyeth, George Tooker, and Paul Cadmus, who embraced and mastered the difficult Renaissance technique of egg yolk tempera painting. Working in this realistic mode and somewhat inspired by Surrealism, these artists have sometimes been called "Magic Realists." Vickrey is best known for his meticulously crafted paintings of single figures imbued with a potent psychological content that suggest a mysterious narrative.

Despite the hyper-realism with which Vickrey works, his subjects are almost always fictional. The artist has eschewed any notion that his images tell a story or that he intends for his subjects to appear sad and brooding, "People are always asking me if there is a story behind my paintings and there almost never is. Once in a great while, I might see something that gives me an idea like some of my movies. . . . The people quite often look sad and brooding, but I don't mean them to be brooding over any particular event in their lives." Shown in front of one of the artist's commonplace cracked concrete walls, "Study of George" is the quintessential single-figure subject for Vickrey.

Self-Portrait
Robert Remsen Vickrey
1962
Self-Portrait
George Clair Tooker
1969
Self-Portrait
Newell Convers Wyeth
1940
Self-Portrait
Andrew Newell Wyeth
1945
Self-Portrait
Thomas Hart Benton
1963
Self-Portrait
Hilde Band Kayn
n.d.
Quietude
Vladimir Shatalow
1962
Singing Blind
Zoltan Leslie Sepeshy
1938
Saint Valentine
Maxfield Parrish
1904