Not currently on view
In the collection of Art Institute of Chicago, Chicago · as of July 2026
FROM THE ART INSTITUTE OF CHICAGO’S CATALOG
William Sidney Mount specialized in scenes of everyday life known as genre paintings. He was one of the earliest American artists to do so, and his compositions, including Bar-room Scene , are rich in narrative and humor and engage with the complex cultural, political, and racial circumstances that defined antebellum society. Here Mount portrayed a boisterous group of patrons in a New York public tavern. The seated men encourage the drunken dance of the central figure, whose tattered clothes and inebriated state suggest a less fortunate position. The figure in the back corner, likely a free Black man, also frequents the tavern but does not participate fully or equally in this 1830s community.
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Thomas Hicks — A Friendly Warning
Adriaen van Ostade — Merrymakers in an Inn
Robert Charles Dudley — Telegraph House, Trinity Bay, Newfou
Richard Brakenburg — Country Inn
Mihály Munkácsy — The Wrestler's Challenge
David Teniers (Flemish, 1610–1690) — Village Festival
Cornelis Visscher — Hearing (De Fiool Speelder)
anonymous — Drie mannen in zeventiende-eeuws kostuum dansend
Adriaen van Ostade — Dancing Couple
Léonard Defrance — The Forge
William Sidney Mount (American, 1807–1868) — The Power of Mu
Jan Havicksz. Steen — Peasant wedding