An exhaustive biography as well as a deep critical appreciation of Kanes art, American Workman should bring new attention to this artists remarkable work. * Pittsburgh Magazine * American Workman asserts that everything we thought we knew about Kane is probably wrong. * ARTnews * American Workman, the first new account of Kanes life and work in fity years, is gorgeous . . . King presents a thoughtful account that shuns the contemporary tactic of inventing scenes and dialogue . . . [ and] Lippincott also offers bracing art-historical detective work and well-grounded speculation about Kanes motives and aims. * Pittsburgh Post-Gazette * Lippincott should be applauded for the deep research in her half of the book, which focuses exclusively on Kanes art. . . . While Kanes work may still be a fixture at MoMA, maybe its time hes broken out of that stuffy Masters of Popular Painting gallery. American Workman may provide the groundwork for doing just that. * ARTnews * This reassessment of the life and art of John Kane (1860-1934) sets a new standard for art scholarship. . . . Illustrations make this book a rich experience. * Maine Antiques Digest * American Workman revisits the life and works of John Kane, a significant figure in the intersecting histories of self-taught art and American modernism. King and Lippincott offer a thorough, accessible account of the artist from his Scottish childhood through his years working as a laborer in Pittsburgh, PA, to his reception as an artist celebrated on a national stage. The work offers first a chronicle of Kane's life and then segues into a discussion of his art and its reception. Commitment to a generous exploration of Kane's life and times unites the authors' narratives, enabling readers to grasp the extraordinary arc of Kane's career. . . .The authors' primary goal for American Workman is the recuperation of Kane's legacy for future histories of American art, and they succeed in a historical moment when the larger impacts of a diverse array of self-taught artistsWilliam Edmondson, Grandma Moses, Morris Hirshfield, Bill Traylorare being reassessed. Highly recommended. * Choice * John Kane saw beauty where others saw a tortured industrial landscape. His artistic eye saw the can-do spirit of Pittsburgh, often filtering out the gritty ugliness that other observers could not see through. Maxwell King and Louise Lippincott have achieved something quite remarkable with their insightful and balanced examination of a most extraordinary man whose talent enabled him to elevate fleeting moments of ordinary life to works of art for the ages. -- Andrew E. Masich, president and CEO, Senator John Heinz History Center American Workman is a long-overdue reexamination of the first self-taught American painter to be taken up by the modern art establishment. As Louise Lippincott notes, there are many parallels between our twenty-first century reality and Kanes Depression-era Pittsburghamong them, a glaring divide between economic haves and have-nots, and an art world hungry for the next big thing. . . . This is not, however, a rags-to-riches story, but something more trenchant. Although John Kane died in poverty, he left an artistic legacy that both spoke to his time and transcended it. -- Jane Kallir, president, Kallir Research Institute When Andy Warhol first hit the art world, he was only the second most famous painter to come out of Pittsburgh. John Kane, steelworker and house painter, had garnered his own headlines in the 1920s, when museums discovered his primitive oils. Almost a century later, Maxwell King and Louise Lippincott are giving Kane the attention he deserves. They do a lovely job on both life and art, and the amalgam Kane forged from the two. -- Blake Gopnik, author of Warhol: The Definitive Biography of the Pop Artist American Workman is a fascinating look at not only the life of a troubled working-class artist but also the surrounding Gilded Age world of industrial mightand the plight of laborers from 1880 through the Great Depression. The story of John Kane illustrates many facets of history, particularly for students of labor, art history, sociology, and Pennsylvania. King and Lippincott called this book a visual exercise, one that attempted to convey a faithful portrait of Kanes time and place, and to that end, the authors most certainly succeeded. . . .[ American Workman] was a terrific blend of narrative and images, which more than successfully portrayed the life and world of one of Pennsylvanias most overlooked artists. * Pennsylvania History: A Journal of Mid-Atlantic Studies *