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A Bowl of Plums
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A Fashionable Woman
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A Peaceable Kingdom
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Abstraction
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Across the Strip
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Adirondacks: Bridge for Fishing
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After the Bath
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Along the Erie Canal
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Along the River
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Americaine Endormie
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Approaching a City
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Approaching Storm
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Approaching Storm
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April
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Arabian Song
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As You Like It
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Autumn Farm
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Balcony, Delaware Water Gap
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Band Concert Night
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Bathers at Bellport
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Black Sea
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Blue Café
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Bouquet
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Breeze Rustling Through Fall Flowers
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Bullfight
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Bunker Hill
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Cabs for Hire
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Capri
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Cathedral
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Children on the Beach
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Children, Dogs and Pony
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Circus Rider
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City Suburbs
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Composition with Black, White, Yellow and Red / Compositie met zwart,wit,geel en rood
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Dancers at the Barre
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Deer in the Forest
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Dew Drops
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Domino Players
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Dorothy Burgers
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Drydock, Gloucester
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Dutch Girl
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East 22nd Street, New York
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Eduardo Cansino, Dancer
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Egg Beater No. 4
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Eggplant
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Elysian Fields
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Emerald Pool
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Emma at the Window
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English Landscape
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Entrance to the Public Gardens in Arles
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Equinox
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Evening on the Pier
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Fantasy (Landscape with Figures)
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Fęte Champętre
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Figure in a Landscape
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Five Rows of Sunglasses
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Florence
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Fruit Dish Glass And Lemon Still Life With Newspaper
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Girl Writing
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Giverny
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Going to Town
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Gondolas
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Gray Day, Goochland
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Green and Maroon
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Green and Tangerine on Red
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Hide and Seek
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High Bridge - Early Moon
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Horses of Attica
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Hudson River
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Ice in the River
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In Luxembourg Gardens
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Interior of a Turkish Cafe
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Interior with Boy
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Interior with Egyptian Curtain
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Joinville
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Judgment of Paris
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Kingsbridge
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Lady in Crinoline
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Lake Albano
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Landscape
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Landscape
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Landscape with purple mountains
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Landscape with three single trees
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Landscape with trees
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Linoleum Cut with Tribute by Sherwood Anderson
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Little Regatta
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Madge in the Morning
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Man on Horseback
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Man on Trotting Horse
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Many Waters
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Maria Lani
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Market in Paris
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May in the Mountains
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Melancholy
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Miss Amelia Van Buren
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Mont Sainte-Victoire with Large Pine
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Monument, Bermuda
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Moonlight
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Moonlight, Tarpon Springs
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Mother and Child
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Mountain Lake - Autumn
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Mountain Landscape
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Mt. Beacon at Newburgh
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My House
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Mystery
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Narrow Street in Paris
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New England Birches
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New York Roof Tops
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Night in Seward Park
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Notebook Leaf No. 114
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Notre Dame: View of the Ile Saint-Louis from the Quai Henri IV
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Nude in an Interior
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Ochre and Red on Red
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Olive Trees
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On a Bridge at Night
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On the River Stour
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Orange and Red on Red
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Painting on Glass No. 17
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Pastel
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Pele Point, Land's End
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Pincian Hill, Rome (Afternoon, Pincian Hill)
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Ponte della Paglia
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Portrait of Amelia C. Van Buren
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Portrait of Elena Pavlowski
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Printed Sheet with Picture
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Ranchos Church, No. II, NM
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Recreation Pier
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Red Barns
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Red Chimneys
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Rowing Home
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Samoa
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Self-Portrai / Zelfportret
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Self-Portrait
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Sketch I For 'Painting with White Border (Moscow)'
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Snow at Louveciennes
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Spring
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Spring Morning
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Spring Night, Harlem River
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Springtime of Delight
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St Peter Repentant
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Still Life with Pomegranate and Pears
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Still Music, 1948
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Street in Lugano
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Street in Quebec
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Street in Village near Biskra
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Street Singer
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Studio, Quai Saint-Michel
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Succession
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Succession, R. 1055
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Summer
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Summer
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Summer Landscape with Hawk
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Sunday
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Sunday
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Surf and Boat
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The Artist's Studio
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The Bench
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The Birth of the Green
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The Blue Room
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The Dancers
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The Dream
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The Dream
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The Dream
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The Flood
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The Garden at Les Lauves
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The Hallway
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The Halt
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The Ham
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The Hesitation of Orestes
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The Luncheon of the Boating Party
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The Migration Series, Panel no. 1: During World War I there was a great migration north by southern African Americans.
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The Migration Series, Panel no. 11: Food had doubled in price because of the war.
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The Migration Series, Panel no. 13: The crops were left to dry and rot. There was no one to tend them.
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The Migration Series, Panel no. 15: There were lynchings.
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The Migration Series, Panel no. 17: Tenant farmers received harsh treatment at the hands of planters.
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The Migration Series, Panel no. 19: There had always been discrimination.
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The Migration Series, Panel no. 21: Families arrived at the station very early. They did not wish to miss their trains north.
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The Migration Series, Panel no. 23: The migration spread.
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The Migration Series, Panel no. 25: They left their homes. Soon some communities were left almost empty.
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The Migration Series, Panel no. 27: Many men stayed behind until they could take their families north with them.
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The Migration Series, Panel no. 29: The labor agent recruited unsuspecting laborers as strike breakers for northern industries.
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The Migration Series, Panel no. 3: From every southern town migrants left by the hundreds to travel north.
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The Migration Series, Panel no. 31: The migrants found improved housing when they arrived north.
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The Migration Series, Panel no. 33: Letters from relatives in the North told of the better life there.
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The Migration Series, Panel no. 35: They left the South in great numbers. They arrived in the North in great numbers.
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The Migration Series, Panel no. 37: Many migrants found work in the steel industry.
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The Migration Series, Panel no. 39: Railroad platforms were piled high with luggage.
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The Migration Series, Panel no. 41: The South was desperate to keep its cheap labor. Northern labor agents were jailed or forced to operate in secrecy.
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The Migration Series, Panel no. 43: In a few sections of the South leaders of both Black and White communities met to discuss ways of making the South a good place to live.
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The Migration Series, Panel no. 45: The migrants arrived in Pittsburgh, one of the great industrial centers of the North.
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The Migration Series, Panel no. 47: As the migrant population grew, good housing became scarce.
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The Migration Series, Panel no. 49: They found discrimination in the North. It was a different kind.
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The Migration Series, Panel no. 5: Migrants were advanced passage on the railroads, paid for by northern industry.
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The Migration Series, Panel no. 51: African Americans seeking to find better housing attempted to move into new areas. This resulted in the bombing of their new homes.
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The Migration Series, Panel no. 53: African American, long-time residents of northern cities met the migrants with aloofness and disdain.
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The Migration Series, Panel no. 55: The migrants, having moved suddenly into a crowded and unhealthy environment, soon contracted tuberculosis. The death rate rose.
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The Migration Series, Panel no. 57: The female workers were the last to arrive north.
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The Migration Series, Panel no. 59: In the North they had the freedom to vote.
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The Migration Series, Panel no. 7: The migrant, whose life had been rural and nurtured by the earth, was now moving to urban life dependent on industrial machinery.
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The Migration Series, Panel no. 9: They left because the boll weevil had ravaged the cotton crop.
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The Open Window
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The Opera, Paris
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The Orange Book
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The Pink Candle
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The Railroad Crossing at Les Patis
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The Rejected Suitor
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The Repentant St. Peter
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The Rise
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The Riviera
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The Road Menders
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The Seer
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The Stone Breaker
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The Tambourine
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The Team
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The Terrace
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The Uprising
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The Voyage
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The Way to the Citadel
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Three Dancers in Purple Skirts
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Through the Window
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To the Rescue
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Tree and Barn
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Tree Nursery
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Triumph of Senators
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Twilight in Samoa
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Twilight in Spain
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Two Girls
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Two in a Boat
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Untitled
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Vanity Fair
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Verandah in Spring
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Verdun, France
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View from the Farnese Gardens, Rome
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Viola Obligato
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Violets
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Visions of Glory
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Waiting for the Concert
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Washington Arch, Spring
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Wheat Field at Auvers with White House
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Windy Day, Bronx River
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Winter, Harlem River
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Woman with Dog
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Woman with Green Hat
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Woman with Orange Background
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Wonderland
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Young Spanish Girl
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Yuma, Arizona























































































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