

Study for "An Aragonese Smuggler"
William Turner Dannat American, 1853–1929
1881
View the original$8
Size
Secure checkout · powered by Stripe
Materials & printing
Archival matte paper, 189 g/m² (10.3 mil), sourced from Japan, printed with multicolor water-based inkjet so every brushstroke stays crisp. Framed prints arrive ready to hang in a .75″ ayous-wood frame with an acrylite front.
Shipping & returns
Made to order and shipped in 5–8 business days. US shipping only for now. Changed your mind? See our return policy.
Why is it this affordable?
A flat 20% margin — just enough to keep the store running. We only sell sizes that reproduce at full quality, and we don’t mark up the large sizes the way most shops do.
About this work
This is a preparatory study for a large-scale, full-length composition of a peasant boy stealing a drink from a pitcher. William Turner Dannat trained in Munich and later in Paris, drawing inspiration from 17th-century Spanish masters like Diego Velázquez, as did his teachers, including the Hungarian painter Mihály Munkácsy. Dannat’s realist style, characterized by loose, expressive brushstrokes, is evident in both this study and in the final painting. The French government purchased An Aragonese Smuggler (1883; Château de Blérancourt) when it was first exhibited at the Paris Salon in 1883. This study is one of the Art Institute’s earliest acquisitions, entering the collection in 1887.
- Artist
- William Turner Dannat American, 1853–1929
- Date
- 1881
- Medium
- Oil on canvas
- Origin
- United States
- Style
- Realism
- Collection
- Drinking and Dining, Arts of the Americas
- Reference
- 1887.231 · Art Institute of Chicago