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"Harris Tuttle Contemplating the Basque Hog "Homer" " Tommy Colter wasn't the only artist that Redbone, Arkansas spawned. His friend Harris was likewise recognized as a "Bumpkin Botticelli," and the two of them became fast friends. This painting by Colter shows Tuttle in his atelier, surrounded by the tools of his trade. He is shown seated on what he called a "Heroic Head of Aphrodite," which he had "with his own two personal hands" dug up from the ruins of Athens, Georgia, and believed to be a lost work of Praxiteles. Eventually it was pointed out to him that there is no record of Praxiteles ever having visited the United States, and that in any case the classical sculptor traditionally worked in marble, not poured concrete. From that point on he used the head as a stool, "soaking up the second-hand spirit of the Muse," as he put it. |
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