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Greg Frank Harris
Cranberry Bog, Bennet's Store, Duxbury, MA

1995

About the Item

This richly-colored plein air painting is by the noted American artist Greg Frank Harris (1953- ). It is composed of oil on linen and is signed in the lower right. On the reverse, it is signed by the artist and titled, “Cranberry Bog, Bennet’s Store, Tremont and Oak Street, Duxbury, Mass.” It is also dated “4/1995.” The painting measures 16” x 24” (23” x 31” framed). Harris cites influences ranging from seventeenth century Dutch landscape painters to the French Impressionists, to the Fauves and other Postimpressionists, to first and second generation abstract expressionists, to contemporaries Wolf Kahn, Stuart Shils, and Eric Aho. The painting is very nicely framed in a silver frame. The painting is in very good condition. The frame is in good condition, with a few tiny areas where the red undercoating shows through the burnished silver topcoat.
  • Creator:
    Greg Frank Harris (1953, American)
  • Creation Year:
    1995
  • Dimensions:
    Height: 23 in (58.42 cm)Width: 31 in (78.74 cm)Depth: 3 in (7.62 cm)
  • Medium:
  • Movement & Style:
  • Period:
  • Condition:
    The painting is very nicely framed in a silver frame. The painting is in very good condition. The frame is in good condition, with a few tiny areas where the red undercoating shows through the burnished silver topcoat.
  • Gallery Location:
    San Francisco, CA
  • Reference Number:
    Seller: PM10192017-11stDibs: LU66632205163
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Then both Yugoslavia and Greece were occupied by the Nazis and fascist armies, Lecoque saved his life in Dubrovnik, in the Italian zone. However after the capitulation of the Italian army in Dalmatia, Lecoque was captured by the Germans and sent to Sarajevo where he spent many months in prison. After a trial the military confined him to Dubrovnik. But, before the end of the war he was again arrested by the Gestapo and together with 43 partisans, imprisoned. One morning, when the Gestapo came to execute Lecoque and his friend Spitzer the director of Police, a Croate who liked Lecoque's paintings very much, surrendered only Spitzer to the Germans. That same morning, one of the Partisan women came to bring Lecoque food. Under her shawl she was hiding a machine gun and a large rusted can with some cooked vegetables for him. When Lecoque went to the cell with all the forty three Partisans he noticed that inside the can were three hand grenades. 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