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American Gothic House Visitor's Welcome Center
Eldon, Iowa
The Painting and the House

In August of 1930, Grant Wood was visiting the town of Eldon, Iowa, when he came upon a house that
inspired a painting that would eventually make him famous. This five-room structure was built in the 1880s
in a style known as the Carpenter Gothic. Wood was very impressed with its compactness and strong
design, and was particularly taken by the Gothic Window placed in the gable.

Wood imagined a farmer and his daughter standing in front of the house. He immediately executed a small
sketch of his idea on brown paper and had someone take a photograph of the house so that he could work
out his idea when he returned home.

Back in his studio, Wood used old Victorian photographs and 19th century portrait paintings to plan the
scene he was to paint. His sister, Nan, and his dentist, Dr. Byron McKeeby, served as models and were
dressed in the period clothes they are seen wearing. Even though they are seen standing together in the
painting, each was painted during separate sittings.

The man was given a pitchfork to hold because Wood wanted him to be associated with haying in the 19th
century rather than the more common framing practice of gardening in the 20th century. It also symbolized
masculinity, the devil, and farming, and served as a compositional device to echo the ovalness of the
people's faces and the repeated lines of the gothic window.

Wood worked on the painting for tow months and finished it in time to enter it into a juried exhibition at the
Art Institute of Chicago. Although jurors were at first divided over whether to accept the painting, it
eventually got into the show and even received a bronze medal and a $300 prize. At the time it aroused
great controversy and was called by one art critic "an insulting caricature of plain country people." But the
American Gothic gradually gained acceptance and has since become one of the most popular and widely
recognized paintings in America.

The Original American Gothic hangs today in the Art Institute of Chicago.
Prairie Architects, Inc. -- 103 South Third Street -- Fairfield, Iowa 52556