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The Truant Gamblers (Undutiful Boys)

Is owned by NYHS: 
Yes
The Truant Gamblers (Undutiful Boys)
The Truant Gamblers (Undutiful Boys)
The Truant Gamblers (Undutiful Boys)
Title
The Truant Gamblers (Undutiful Boys)
Date 
1835
Medium 
Oil on canvas
Dimensions 
frame: 34 x 40 x 4 1/2 in. ( 86.4 x 101.6 x 11.4 cm )Overall: 24 x 30 in. ( 61 x 76.2 cm )
Credit Line 
Gift of The New-York Gallery of the Fine Arts
Object Number 
1858.23
Marks 
Signature and date: at lower right: WM. S. MOUNT / 1835
Gallery Label 
Like Farmer's Bargaining (N-YHS 1858.59), The Truant Gamblers (Undutiful Boys), Mount's second picture for the New York art collector, Luman Reed, was painted outdoors on the Mount farm in Stony Brook, New York. The scene features four young truant gamblers who have abandoned their farm chores and are gathered in a circle "hustling coppers," or pennies, on the floor in Mount's barn. Approaching from the left, an elder farmer, who has presumably been hard at work, seems determined to punish the truant boys with the switch in his right hand. As in Farmer's Bargaining, Mount's faithful depiction of the ambiance and details of country life was no doubt enhanced by his childhood experience as a farmer boy and his long residence in a farming community. The Truant Gamblers (Undutiful Boys) should also be seen in the context of a larger national trend to celebrate American rural life and childhood. The majority of Mount's contemporaries, including Reed, had grown up in farming communities. Moreover, the veneration of the farmer reached new heights in the Era of Jacksonian Democracy, particularly as the country began to shift from an agrarian nation to a more industrial one. For Reed, who had moved from the Hudson River town of Coxsackie to New York City in 1815, Mount's painting of rural farmers would have served as a nostalgic reminder of his origins. Reed is reported to have paid $220.00 for the picture.
Provenance 
New-York Gallery of the Fine Arts, 1844-58 Mrs. Luman Reed, New Yo