Object Image

This painting shows a monument on Philae Island in Egypt known as Trajan's Kiosk, or Pharaoh's Bed, which was built for the Roman emperor Trajan. During the nineteenth century, magazines such as Harper's New Monthly often published engravings of foreign monuments and landscapes with articles on travel. Charles McIlhenney, like many other artists, may have painted ideal landscapes of distant countries based on these illustrations.

Credit: Gift of Dr. William Henry Holmes

N.d.
Oil on canvas mounted on paperboard
30.5 x 23.9cm
1930.12.41
Image and text: Smithsonian American Art Museum, 2024

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