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East Bound Freight

1938
20th century
34 1/4 x 44 1/8 in. (87 x 112.1 cm)

Dale Nichols, American, (1904–1995)

Object Type: Paintings
Creation Place: North America, United States
Medium and Support: Oil on canvas
Credit Line: Carleton College Art Collection, gift of Hal Higdon, class of 1953
Accession Number: 2005.025
Dale Nichols is a Regionalist painter from Nebraska who came of age artistically in the 1930s. Nichols denied that he was responsible for bringing attention to his native state. Instead he quipped, “Dale Nichols did not put Nebraska on the map; Nebraska put Dale Nichols on the map.” The East Bound Freight is a visual hymn to Nebraska’s vast horizontal landscape. Blanketed in snow, this land was traversed by the railroad, which tied rural America together throughout the heartland. Hal Higdon was inspired to give the painting to Carleton by news of a future museum facility. The East Bound Freight is one of several works by Nichols owned by the Higdon family. Higdon’s father, once editor of an industrial magazine in Chicago, frequently employed Nichols as a freelance illustrator. The donor remembers this painting as a fixture in the family living room through his childhood and while a student at Carleton. Dale Nichols served as art editor of the Encyclopedia Britannica during the 1940s. This work is thereby connected to a small but significant group of American paintings from the same period given to Carleton by William Benton, one-time CEO of Encyclopedia Britannica.

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