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1st Edition

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Artists
Brewer, Adrian More info
Edition Details
Year:1941
Class:Art Print
Status:Official
Technique:Lithograph
Size:11 X 22
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From: https://encyclopediaofarkansas.net/entries/sentinel-of-freedom-painting-2130/
"The most famous painting by Arkansas artist Adrian Louis Brewer (1891–1956), the 1941 “Sentinel of Freedom” has been reproduced millions of times and has received wide distribution in America and abroad. Several million reproductions of the painting were distributed to schools, churches, and individuals during World War II, and the painting has become a staple of modern culture.

The painting was commissioned by Little Rock (Pulaski County) insurance executive Clyde E. Lowry. Lowry was acquainted with Brewer’s work as a combat artist who painted wartime posters and more during World War I. Lowry wanted a painting depicting “the beauty of the flag when the wind had died down and the gentle folds took their natural place.”

At the time, Brewer was painting commissioned portraits of various Arkansas elites and was initially reluctant to accept the commission. He had painted many American flags during his years as a combat artist, but they had all been incorporated in the scenes of battles, never standing alone as the central figure of the painting. After accepting the commission, he decided to make the flag the focal point of a traditional landscape. The oil painting that resulted depicts the American flag hanging loosely on a flagpole, which is perched on top of the Boston Mountains of Arkansas, overlooking a background of the sky covered in orange and pink clouds. Rays of sunshine breaking through the bottoms of the clouds, giving the flag an ethereal appearance.

The popularity of the painting was due in part to the dichotomy of a peaceful, airy landscape with the restful, dignified, peacetime flag versus the strong feelings of patriotism usually evoked by the American flag.

The painting was unveiled in Washington DC in a ceremony attended by many members of Congress, the judiciary, ambassadors, and other dignitaries and citizens. Admiral Harold R. Stark, then chief of naval operations, was present at the unveiling and expressed the hope that the painting would someday be displayed permanently at the U.S. Naval Academy.

Under the direction of Lowry, the American Company of Little Rock, a printing company, issued several thousand embossed prints of “Sentinel of Freedom.” The prints were embossed, treated, framed, and sold for $3.00. Part of the inscription on the back of the frame of the embossed prints read: “The Sentinel of Freedom stands guard over the homes of 130 million people. Though not visible from every threshold, its presence is ever felt. The blue of the mountains, the sparkle of the river, and the golden rays of the sun lend beauty and elegance to this gentle but determined master of American destiny.”

The separate branches of the armed forces distributed the prints through their ranks. Ships that went to sea during World War II carried a print on board, and USOs had a print hung in their halls; it also hung in Congressman Brook Hays’s office in Washington DC. A print of the flag hung in many classrooms throughout Arkansas. Lowry received several thousand letters concerning the painting and thousands of requests for reproductions of it from such notables as automobile manufacturer Henry Ford, poet Edward A. Guest, former president Herbert Hoover, Republican presidential candidate Wendell Willkie, and General George W. Marshall. After the unveiling, it toured Washington DC in the 1940s, and Brewer autographed the prints being sold. The original finally ended up in the Little Rock Museum of Fine Arts, where it remained for several years. Lowry and Edwina Brewer, wife of Adrian Brewer, along with their families, presented the original to the U.S. Naval Academy, Assembly Hall Library, in Annapolis, Maryland, on March 1, 1964, where it is still displayed.

The picture occasionally can be seen in movies and television shows. It was visible in the 1990 movie Beverly Hills Cop II and on the ABC sitcom Spin City in Michael J. Fox’s office."
Sales History
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Six Month Average$59.13
Average Price$59.13
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Highest Price$68.25
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