Thomas Hart Benton was born in 1889 in a family with long tradition in American history. His father was a Congressman and his great uncle, whose name he bore himself, was one of the most influential man in the United States in the 19th century, the first Missouri senator and the only senator until nowadays that served 30 years continuously in the Senate (he was elected five times in a row).
Thomas Benton attended the Art Institute of Chicago between 1906 and 1907 and at 19 he was in Paris, center of European painting at the time, where he stayed for three years. Greatly influenced by the French Impressionists, and especially by Cezanne, Thomas Hart approached modernism at the beginning of his painting career. He also imitated Stanton MacDonald-Wright's Synchronism, a somewhat abstract type of painting which he was later keen to deny.
However, Thomas Benton later on gradually moved towards a regionalist style in his paintings, a style that encouraged the country life in local Missouri rather than the cosmopolite life on the Eastern Coast. Many of his paintings, among them July Hay, underline this change of perspective. We may consider Benton not necessarily anti-modernism, but it is true and conceivable that he deems to punish New York and the Eastern Coast for allegedly "not having appreciated him enough." For example, he attacks the homosexual community of New York in 1935, saying that in the Midwest citizens were "highly intolerant of aberration," subjecting the devious queer to "the scrutiny of strong prejudice." In this sense, not only is the Midwest and local life a theme for his paintings, but also a form of expression for his own set of ideals and an ideal place,...
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