He then spent several years studying art in Paris
While there, he became a frequent visitor to the salon of Gertrude
and Leo Stein Demuth's health was frail; from an early age he
suffered from lameness and as an adult from severe diabetes.
Though plagued by illness all his life, he produced over a thousand
works of art, including the well known "My Egypt" which
was inspired by grain elevators in Lancaster. During his lifetime
he sold many of his works, enjoyed favorable reviews from art
critics and was part of Alfred Stieglitz's American Place Gallery
in New York.
Although he studied and painted in Philadelphia, New York, Provincetown,
Paris and Bermuda, Demuth created most of his art in his home
where he worked in a small second floor studio of the rear wing,
overlooking the garden. The garden was tended by his mother Augusta
and was the source of inspiration for many of Demuth's paintings.
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