Woman on a Dock (reproduction)

Inkjet print on paper; reproduction of an original oil paintingUnknown contemporary artist; style influenced by American Realism and artists such as Fairfield Porter or Edward Hopper

Woman on a Dock (reproduction)

Style & Movement

American Realism / New Realism

Medium & Technique

Digital printing on bond paper; the original work appears to be oil on canvas using flat color fields and hard-edge realism

Creation Period

21st-century print of a mid-to-late 20th-century style painting

Dimensions & Format

Standard US Letter (8.5 x 11 inches); Landscape orientation printed on a vertical sheet

Subject Description

A woman in a blue swimsuit stands on a wooden dock looking out over a calm body of water toward a distant shoreline. The composition features high-contrast lighting, a red boat on the left, and a green boat on the right, emphasizing solitude and tranquility.

Condition & Value Assessment

Condition Assessment

Fair; the item is a printed copy on standard office paper with visible folds, creasing, and text bleed-through from 'Resources' documentation on the reverse

Estimated Market Value

$0 USD (No commercial value for a paper printout)

Auction Estimate

N/A

Provenance History

Non-academic; the print is part of a government-related document (noted by DHS.gov and CBP.gov URLs), suggesting it was printed for administrative or personal reference

Art Historical Significance

Low as a physical object; however, the image demonstrates the lasting influence of mid-century American figurative painting on contemporary visual culture and illustration.

Notable Features

The presence of administrative URLs and 'RESOURCES' text overlapping the image confirms this is a document printout rather than an original artwork or limited edition print.

Condition Issues

Crinkling of the paper, ink bleed from the reverse side, digital pixelation, and physical creases from handling.

Conservation Recommendations

None required for the print; if the original painting were found, it should be kept in a climate-controlled environment away from UV light.

Identified on 7/12/2026