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Sixth Avenue and Thirtieth Street, New York City (Collection of the Delaware Art Museum)

John Sloan1907

National Academy of Design

National Academy of Design
New York, United States

This painting, which depicts an intoxicated woman crossing a street in a state of confusion and disarray, illustrates John Sloan’s compassionate, nonjudgmental approach to the squalor and misery he encountered in the Tenderloin district of Manhattan. The poor woman is framed by the dynamic elevated train and the commercial thoroughfare, which seem to heighten her sense of disorientation.

Two young, fashionably dressed women jeer as they pass by, while the men on the corner look on with smug indifference. Sloan later commented that “this canvas has surely caught the atmosphere of the Tenderloin: drab, shabby, happy, sad, and human.”

© Delaware Art Museum / Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York. A downloadable image is unavailable for this object due to copyright, trademark or related rights.

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  • Title: Sixth Avenue and Thirtieth Street, New York City (Collection of the Delaware Art Museum)
  • Creator: John Sloan
  • Date Created: 1907
National Academy of Design

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