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  1. American Gothic, often understood as a satirical comment on the midwestern character, quickly became one of America’s most famous paintings and is now firmly entrenched in the nation’s popular culture. Yet Wood intended it to be a positive statement about rural American values, an image of reassurance at a time of great dislocation and disillusionment.

  2. Nov 7, 2019 · American Gothic has become so famous as an image that many people don’t realize that it actually was—and still is—a painting. In their minds, it is no longer an object. In some ways, the idea of an original has become degraded in our digital era. And so what I often try to re-instill in people’s minds is that this is an actual painting ...

  3. American Gothic, often understood as a satirical comment on the midwestern character, quickly became one of America’s most famous paintings and is now firmly entrenched in the nation’s popular culture. Yet Wood intended it to be a positive statement about rural American values, an image of reassurance at a time of great dislocation and disillusionment.

  4. Exhibited publicly for the first time at the Art Institute in 1930, American Gothic won Wood a $300 prize and instant fame. Wood galvanized his success by co-founding the Stone City Colony and Art School in Iowa and also teaching in the art department at the University of Iowa, heralding the message of Regionalism in the face of a move towards increasing abstraction in American art.

  5. Oct 14, 2023 · American Gothic, 1930, can be found in the permanent collection of the Chicago Art Institute, USA. At the time of writing, the painting is on view to the public in the Arts of the Americas Room, Gallery 263.The provenance of the artwork is fairly straight forward, having been sold directly to the Chicago gallery in November 1930 from Grant Wood ...

    • 3 min
  6. Transcript. Grant Wood’s American Gothic has puzzled museumgoers, art lovers, and the average citizen since its completion in 1930. At the time of its creation, Wood was one of many artists who embraced an art style known as Regionalism—an art form that rejected European Modernist influences in favor of a more realistic and folksy approach ...

    • 2 min
  7. By Google Arts & Culture. American Gothic (1930) by Grant Wood (American, 1891-1942) The Art Institute of Chicago. Any list of America’s best-known oil paintings must feature Grant Wood’s 1930 ‘American Gothic’. Initially, Wood only received a bronze medal (along with a $300 prize) for his masterwork at Chicago’s 1930 Exhibition of Art.