
Cleveland Museum of Art
Splinter Beach
George Bellows
- Date
- 1916
- Medium
- lithograph
- Culture
- America
- Department
- Prints
- Institution
- Cleveland Museum of Art
During George Bellows’s first decade in New York City, starting in 1904, newspapers ran many stories about the “social problem” of the urban poor, reporting that the city’s tenement district lacked cleanliness and order. Drawn to this unvarnished side of city life, Bellows made several images of the public docks along the East River that were unofficial places of recreation for the city’s tenement children. Both Splinter Beach and River-Front feature, without sentimentality, children that display their nakedness unabashedly. Disturbingly, both images feature fully clothed adults observing or even touching children, as well as other sexual touching. Portrayals of sexual indecency in Bellows’s work aligned with the off-color humor often found in fictional representations of the urban poor of the time. Splinter Beach was located under the Brooklyn Bridge, the underside of which can be seen in this image.
The authoritative record is held by Cleveland Museum of Art. LinkedCulture surfaces this object and its connections; it does not alter institutional metadata.
Related across collections
Semantically similar works from Cleveland Museum of Art and other institutions.

River-Front
Cleveland Museum of Art

Seated Boy
Cleveland Museum of Art

In the Subway
Cleveland Museum of Art

Indoor Athlete
Cleveland Museum of Art

Business Men's Class
Cleveland Museum of Art

Solitude
Cleveland Museum of Art

Boys Bathing
Minneapolis Institute of Art

Preliminaries
Cleveland Museum of Art

Boy on Roof, Pitt Street, New York
Getty Museum

Study for Alexander Grinager's <i>Boys Bathing</i>
Minneapolis Institute of Art
![[Parade, New York City]](https://media.getty.edu/iiif/image/79395efd-5dff-4161-be4f-adae5a1c07e6/full/808,/0/default.jpg)
[Parade, New York City]
Getty Museum

The Terminal, New York
Getty Museum