Snap the Whip, oil painting created in 1872 by American artist Winslow Homer. When Snap the Whip appeared, Homer was already a somewhat well-known and admired painter. However, this painting can be said to have ushered in a new period in Homer’s career, a transition from his earliest years through to a more reflective, yet equally productive, middle period. The immense popularity of the work, probably his best loved, cemented his reputation and assured his place in American history.
Homer made it his mission to chronicle the people who lived in a symbiotic relationship with the rugged American countryside around them. Snap the Whip shows a group of children playing the age-old game of the same name outside the “little red schoolhouse” in which they are taught. The white shirts of three of the boys are offset by the striking red of the schoolhouse. The figures, the building, and the landscape behind are set in perfect balance.
In one sense, Snap the Whip is a lighthearted piece that celebrates youth and play. However, in its form and content there are a number of subtle tensions: the stillness of the land and the movement of the children, the connections—held and broken—between the boys, the interior mental life of the schoolhouse and the “fun” outdoor life of the field. Homer’s last depiction of a large and active group of people, Snap the Whip has remained one of the finest examples of his quintessentially American naturalistic style.