“Her original paintings capture the spirit and preserve the vision of a disappearing countryside.” So reads the epitaph of the American artist Grandma Moses, also known as Anna Marie Robertson Moses, whose life spanned from the Civil War to the Kennedy administration. A self-taught artist who didn’t start painting until she was in her 70s, Moses’s scenes of America’s bygone era are cherished by the public but shunned by the art establishment. Moses created more than 1,500 works, mostly between the late 1930s and her death in 1961, blending personal experience with national history to create soothing, nostalgic American landscapes.
She was known as “Grandma” to audiences who were quick to embrace her and found comfort in this maternal stalwart during times of great change, including World War II, the Cold War and the Civil Rights Era. After living a quiet life on a farm, raising five children and running a successful butter-making business, Grandma Moses became a media sensation, controversially surpassing other female artists of her day in fame.
A major retrospective of Moses, currently on view at the Smithsonian American Art Museum in Washington, D.C., aims to enhance her unique place in American art. Curated by Leslie Umberger and Randall R. Griffey, the exhibition features 88 works of art (including 33 from the museum’s collection) created between the late 1930s and the artist’s death in 1961 at the age of 101. Here is a guide to the six important works in the exhibition, which will remain on view until mid-July before traveling to the Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art in Bentonville, Arkansas, in September. exhibition.
Introducing maple sugar1940 or earlier


Image credit: Smithsonian American Art Museum. Artwork Copyright © Grandma Moses Properties Co., NY.
Considered one of Grandma Moses’s most iconic and American paintings, Introducing maple sugar Demonstrating a recurring theme in her work is “sugaring,” or the conversion of maple sap into sugar. Farm work was one of her favorite subjects, and here she presents a communal and multigenerational view of this seasonal activity, including neighbors delivering firewood and children waiting for their maple syrup (made by pouring hot syrup over the snow).
When Moses created this work, rituals of farm life such as these were fading away, and she was considered a commemorator whose paintings visually preserved the tradition. Maple sugar also has political implications. During the Revolution, it was the northern alternative to white sugar, which was taxed by the British government. Later, during the Civil War, this “freedom sugar” from the North became a substitute for the “slave sugar” harvested by slave labor in the South.
Grandma Moses goes to the big city1946


Image credit: Smithsonian American Art Museum. Artwork Copyright © Grandma Moses Properties Co., NY.
In the center of this cheerful farm scene at Moses Farm in Eagle Bridge, New York, we see a woman in a black dress—Moses herself, preparing for her first visit to New York in November 1940. “I was asked to go to the big city of New York and attend a Thanksgiving celebration at Kimbells Auditorium, where a picture of Grandma Moses hung,” she later recalled in her autobiography. “Grandma who has never traveled far before, with so many expectations, so many worries, so much restlessness, so much confusion, is finally on her way!”
Created several years after the event and a rare painting in which Moses refers to himself, the work captures the artist at the crossroads between his life as a peasant and his life as an artist in renown. In the center of the composition we see scenes from life at Eagle Bridge, such as children playing, sheep grazing and a man plowing a field. A dirt road cuts across the composition and rises into the unknown.
Go out and buy a Christmas tree1946


Image credit: Smithsonian American Art Museum. Artwork Copyright © Grandma Moses Properties Co., NY.
This white, gleaming scene demonstrates Moses’ panoramic style; it also represents her acquiescence in the suggestion to paint a Nativity scene. She disliked religious subjects and generally shunned interior decoration, but when her gallery owner reminded her that preparations for Christmas often began outdoors, Moses was inspired to create this painting depicting the popular American ritual. Other holidays she painted include Thanksgiving, Halloween and the Fourth of July.
When Hallmark added this image to a greeting card in 1951, it was an immediate success. At a time when the materialistic side of Christmas is beginning to overshadow the religious significance of the holiday, the painting serves as a reminder of the values of family togetherness, gratitude for nature’s bounty, and the anticipation of long-standing traditions.
thunderstorm1948


Image credit: Smithsonian American Art Museum. Artwork Copyright © Grandma Moses Properties Co., NY.
Moses considered the power of nature to be an integral part of its beauty and painted several scenes of approaching storms. Some of the works recall the natural disasters Moses experienced during his rural life in northeast New York, including thunderstorms, blizzards, forest fires, and tornadoes.
These storm paintings depict the tension of anticipation: dark skies, trees bending in the wind, people preparing, and restless horses rising to their feet (a keen touch that demonstrates Moses’ understanding of animals and their behavior). Other storm scenes show people continuing to work despite the weather, as if to say: “This too shall pass.” In thunderstorm We all saw it – some looked up nervously; Others are busy with their own business.
Checkered House1955


Photo credit: Lucia RM Martino/Smithsonian American Art Museum. Artwork Copyright © Grandma Moses Properties Co., NY.
Early in her painting career, Moses established a visual vocabulary of favorite subjects, including her family’s long history in New York, particularly the lives of her two great-grandfathers, one of whom built the first carriage to run on the Cambridge Turnpike and the other who fought in the Revolutionary War. As part of this historical theme she painted many versions Checkered House— A landmark building built in 1765 and the site of a key victory during the American Revolution.
Its unique appearance has folkloric appeal, and its red pattern made it attractive for use in a 1946 advertisement for the “Original Red” shade of DuBarry lipstick. Moses’ works became popular so quickly in part because of their reproducibility, appearing on products such as Hallmark greeting cards, curtain fabrics, ceramics, plates, children’s tea sets, trivets and Spry shortening jars before this type of art marketing became popular. this Checkered House The lipstick ad was a turning point for Moses’ gallerist, Otto Carril, who realized he had to pay close attention to the use of her work and limit advertising licenses to products more in line with Moses and her lifestyle.
rainbow1961


Photo credit: Lee Stalsworth, Fine Art through Photography, LLC. Collection of Robert Pender. Artwork Copyright © Grandma Moses Properties Co., NY.
This was the last painting Moses completed after his 101st birthday. rainbow Reflecting the range of her favorite subjects: a working farm filled with adults, children and animals, all engaged in harvest activities and other natural rhythms of life. A prismatic but fading rainbow spans the painting almost like a spiritual force, while a tree of life is firmly rooted in the center of the composition.
Moses couldn’t paint after he finished rainbow. After several falls, she was transferred to a medical center in July 1961, where she was confined to a bed for safety until her death in December of the same year. After her death, the nation fell into mourning, with President John F. Kennedy declaring: “Her passing is mourned by all Americans.”








