Packet 5: Bonus 14

A Black woman stands in a doorway in Alice Ravenel Huger Smith’s painting The Rector’s Kitchen and View of St. Michael’s, a work characteristic of this city’s “Renaissance.” For 10 points each:
[10h] Name this city where Alfred Hutty relocated to help camouflage ships during World War I. This city’s Gibbes Museum of Art displays works by Anna Heyward Taylor and Elizabeth O’Neill Verner.
ANSWER: Charleston, South Carolina [accept Charleston Renaissance]
[10e] This artist’s only painting of a Black woman came after a visit to Charleston and is called South Carolina Morning. This artist painted his wife Jo drinking coffee in Automat and likely as one of the women in Chop Suey.
ANSWER: Edward Hopper
[10m] Smith founded Charleston’s club for this technique, which Childe Hassam (“HASS-um”) used to depict St. Michael’s church. In this method for preparing intaglio prints, acid and a needle are used to cut grooves in pieces of metal.
ANSWER: etching [accept eau forte]
<Indiana, Painting and Sculpture> | E. Prelims 5 - Indiana + Vanderbilt + MIT

HeardPPBE %M %H %
2116.19100%62%0%

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TournamentEditionMatchHeardPPBE %M %H %
Main Site2026-04-172116.19100%62%0%