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Welcome to the T.C. Steele State Historic Site Virtual
Tour
To date, it has been possible to identify several hundred works of art created on the 211 acres that comprise the T.C.
Steele State Historic Site. Many Individual painting sites have been identified. Using this virtual tour you can
compare today's vistas and views with those depicted in Steele's paintings.
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Week's Wash, 1910 Oil on canvas; T.C. Steele SHS

A photograph of the Week's Wash, taken in 2002
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Location 6 "Week's Wash"
In his later years, Steele increasingly turned to "pure"
landscapes, in which no people or animals appear. He may have felt this would allow the technical elements to stand
out more strongly, elements, which he termed the "quality of a picture’s tone, the music of its color." The artist
made frequent exception, however, for his wife. He featured Selma many times in his landscapes as she engaged in
domestic activities or worked in the garden. Selma took great pride in any contribution she was able to make to
her beloved husband's work.
The building
in the background is not the Large Studio; rather it is the older
Little Studio. This building, which now serves as the site office,
was moved to its present location in the early 1920s after standing
for many years on the west side of the driveway. After construction
of the Large Studio between the Little Studio and this location, the
Little Studio was obscured from view by the larger building.
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Location 7 "West Porch in Winter"
In the nineteen years T.C. and Selma Steele shared the
House of the Singing Winds, it was never truly completed. The core section was built in 1907, the house nearly
doubled in size the following year, and additions and changes continued to be built in the ensuing years. Ten days
before his death, as workmen bustled around him making yet another alteration to his home, Steele wrote, "It is good
to hear hammer and saw. It means someone is well and at work." Steele's paintings of his home, studios and other
structures help guide building restoration.
The House of the Singing Winds was, at first, strictly a seasonal home. Steele first modified his habit of spending
winters in Indianapolis in 1910, when he constructed two tiny studios on the property and spent the winter landscape
painting. Gradually, the home became more of a year-round residence. When Steele became formally associated with
Indiana University in Bloomington, he was better able to paint the site year-round.
Visitors are invited to
tour the historic Large Studio and House of the Singing Winds during
the site's regular hours of operation. To see more paintings by T.C.
Steele, visit nearby Indiana University where Steele served as Indiana University's first Artist
in Residence from 1922 until his death in 1926.
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West Porch in Winter, 1922 Oil on canvas; T.C. Steele SHS

A photograph of the West Porch in Winter,
taken in 2002
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Take The Virtual Tour
The Studio Garden,
Pergola in Early Spring,
North Slope Vista,
Old Oak Tree,
A Gray Day at the Gateway,
Week's Wash,
West Porch in Winter
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