Honoré Desmond Sharrer was an American artist. She first received public acclaim in 1950 for her painting Tribute to the American Working People, a five-image polyptych conceived in the form of a Renaissance altarpiece, except that its central figure is a factory worker and not a saint. Flanking this central figure are smaller scenes of ordinary people—at a picnic, in a parlor, on a farm and in the schoolroom. Meticulously painted in oil on composition board in a style and color palette reminiscent of the Flemish Masters, the finished work is more than six feet long and three feet high and took her five years to complete. It was the subject of a 2007 retrospective at the Smithsonian Institution and is part of the permanent collection of the Smithsonian American Art Museum.
Source: Wikipedia
Works in Collection
8 works
Studies for Workers and Paintings
Honoré Sharrer
1943
Studies for Workers and Paintings
Honoré Sharrer
1943
Studies for Workers and Paintings
Honoré Sharrer
1943
Studies for Workers and Paintings
Honoré Sharrer
1943
Studies for Workers and Paintings
Honoré Sharrer
1943
Studies for Workers and Paintings
Honoré Sharrer
1943
Studies for Workers and Paintings
Honoré Sharrer
1943
Workers and Paintings
Honoré Sharrer
1943
Exhibitions
6 exhibitionsFeb 15, 1945 – Mar 18, 1945
Recent Acquisitions
38 artists
Jun 20, 1945 – Feb 13, 1946
The Museum Collection of Painting and Sculpture
174 artists
Sep 10, 1946 – Dec 08, 1946
Fourteen Americans
15 artists · 1 curator
Dec 23, 1948 – Mar 13, 1949
American Paintings from the Museum Collection
115 artists · 1 curator
Oct 31, 1949 – Nov 20, 1949
Polio Poster Competition
23 artists · 1 curator
Oct 19, 1954 – Feb 06, 1955
XXVth Anniversary Exhibition: Paintings from the Museum Collection
260 artists