Description
A wonderful water color and pencil drawing of a fashionable Baltimore woman. Keehn, as well as Reginald Marsh, often painted the women of Baltimore they would see in the city streets during the 1950s and 1960s. This stunning painting channels the mid-century art movement and utilizes watercolor paint upon paper. This painting is a truly unique artful accent that is sure to bring a tasteful element to your home decor setting.
Keehn was born on August 6, 1931 in Pottsville, a coal-mining town in central eastern Pennsylvania, where he lived until he finished high school. Keehn studied at the Maryland Institute of Art in Baltimore, MD. There he learned the techniques of the Old Masters from Jacques Maroger who had been Conservateur at the Louvre Museum in Paris before World War Two. He was also a good friend with renowned artist Reginald Marsh. As a figurative painter, Keehn was one of the famous “Six Young Realists of Baltimore” all products of the Maryland Institute of Art, who together countered the abstract expressionism.
Dimensions:
Paper: 11” H x 9” W
Frame: 14” H x 12” W
Explore more from our collection.





Reviews
There are no reviews yet.