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19TH-CENTURY AMERICAN ART IN 6 THEMES

The century after the United States established its independence saw artists making works that were crucial to forming the country’s cultural identity The 19th century was a defining time for the US. The nation had just gained independence from Britain and was quickly expanding its territory westward. Cities including Boston, New York, Baltimore, and Philadelphia […]
|Viet Art View

The century after the United States established its independence saw artists making works that were crucial to forming the country’s cultural identity

The 19th century was a defining time for the US. The nation had just gained independence from Britain and was quickly expanding its territory westward. Cities including Boston, New York, Baltimore, and Philadelphia were becoming powerful industrial and financial centres, while the whole country faced a major social and political crisis over slavery, resulting in the brutal Civil War.

These turbulent events and the growing self-confidence of the rapidly expanding nation had a profound effect on its painters. For decades the young country’s artists had largely emulated the styles and subjects of British and European paintings owned by wealthy colonial families, but as the audience for art grew and the country’s first public museums opened, distinctively American painters emerged across a range of genres.

Martin Johnson Heade (1819-1904), ‘Cattleya Orchid with Two Brazilian Hummingbirds’, 1871.
Oil on panel. 13¾ × 18 in (34.9 × 45.7 cm).

1, The Hudson River School
In 1825 the 24-year-old British artist Thomas Cole sailed up the Hudson River to capture the beauty of New York state’s Catskill Mountains. The paintings he created, which drew on concepts of the sublime and foregrounded the scale of America’s wild landscapes, would spark the country’s first unique artistic movement and inspire a generation of artists. Cole’s students Frederic Edwin Church and Asher Brown Durand joined him on sketching trips to the Adirondacks and New England, resulting in some of the nation’s finest output in 19th-century landscape painting.

Thomas Cole (1801-1848), ‘View Near Catskill’, 1828-29.
Oil on panel. 24¾ × 35 in (62.9 × 88.9 cm).

Church became one of the most recognised of the group, with his grand canvases and idealised views attracting thousands of visitors on international tours. He also painted landscapes in South America, the Arctic and, later, the Middle East and Greece.

Durand became increasingly drawn to naturalism, particularly after visiting England and seeing the work of Constable. After Cole’s death in 1848 he became the Hudson River School’s leader, writing a series of nine Letters on Landscape Painting published in 1855 in The Crayon, one of the first American periodicals dedicated to fine art.

Jasper Francis Cropsey (1823-1900), ‘A Glimpse of Greenwood Lake’, 1883.
Oil on canvas. 14 × 24¼ in (35.6 × 61.6 cm).

Second-generation painters associated with the school, John Frederick Kensett and Sanford Robinson Gifford, travelled in Europe for several years. Both incorporated the continental sensibility for landscape painting into precisely rendered canvases of their natural surroundings.

2, The frontier
The 19th century was when the US as we know it today became a reality, and when America’s expansionist mythology — manifest destiny — was born. The Louisiana Purchase of 1803, when the US government bought massive tracts of land from the French, almost doubled the size of the country, and expeditions were swiftly mounted to survey and secure the new territories. Over the next few decades successive governments ruthlessly annexed land occupied by Native Americans as far as the Pacific coast.

Thomas Worthington Whittredge (1820-1910), ‘A Wagon Train on the Plains, Platte River, Colorado’, circa 1866.
Oil on canvas. 11 × 21¾ in (27.9 × 55.2 cm).

Artists such as Albert Bierstadt and Alfred Jacob Miller were among the first to document the West. Soon after moving from Baltimore to New Orleans in 1837 Miller joined a fur-trading expedition to the Rocky Mountains. He recorded the landscape and visited Native American communities, documenting their lives and culture in Romantic paintings aimed at a European audience.

Starting in 1859 Bierstadt travelled to the Rockies with a government survey team, and later to Yosemite Valley and Yellowstone. Sketches from these trips were the basis for the epic canvases of unspoiled natural landscapes for which he became famous.

A monumental painting of the Grand Canyon by Thomas Moran, who was influenced by J.M.W. Turner and had also joined a US Geological Survey team to Yellowstone, helped persuade Congress to protect the area as the country’s first national park.

Paintings of hunting and trapping scenes by William Tylee Ranney were inspired by his time in the south-west. He had left his studio in Brooklyn in 1836 to volunteer with the Texas Army in the revolution led by US colonists against the Mexican government.

Meanwhile, artists such as Frederic Remington and Charles Marion Russell focused on heroic images of cowboys, which would become a touchstone of western American iconography.

3, Still life
As American cities like Philadelphia — the country’s first capital — flourished during the early 19th century, and more wealthy and middle-class citizens looked to beautify their homes, a boom in still-life painting developed. Meeting the demand, many artists looked to the earlier traditions of 17th-century Dutch and 18th-century French painting, and their contemporaries in England, to create lush compositions of American abundance.

William Michael Harnett (1848-1892), ‘The Imperial Eagle (Still Life with Bust of Dante)’, 1883.
Oil on panel. 10 × 13¾ in (25.4 × 34.9 cm).

Among the most renowned of these in the early century was Raphaelle Peale, one of 16 children of the painter and inventor Charles Willson Peale, several of whom were named after famous artists. Like many others in the Peale dynasty, Raphaelle found acclaim and patronage in Philadelphia, and while his brother Rembrandt focused on portraiture, he became particularly celebrated for his still-lifes.

The use of trompe l’oeil — the convincing mimicry of reality in which objects seem to extend out of the frame — was also popular. Masters of such techniques include William Michael HarnettJohn Frederick PetoWilliam J. McCloskey and Jefferson David Chalfant.

Two émigrés from what is now Germany also made their name in this field, working in New York and around New England. Severin Roesen had the more spectacular style, painting elaborate vases of flowers, while Joseph Decker mostly focused on edible subjects, including nuts and fruit.

4, Everyday life
As American painting developed through the 19th-century many artists, including Winslow Homer and Eastman Johnson — a co-founder of the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York, which opened in 1872 — moved away from academic painting to find beauty in everyday life and shape a distinctly American field of genre painting.

Homer had trained as a commercial illustrator in Boston, where he depicted New England social life for magazines such as Harper’s Weekly, but would become one of America’s most revered artists. He turned to oil painting and watercolour after moving to New York in 1859 and, in addition to being embedded with the Union Army as an artist during the Civil War, was greatly influenced by a two-year trip to England’s coastal villages in the early 1880s.

Another celebrated 19th century genre painter, John George Brown depicted the realities of young boys in New York City, nodding to Victorian ideas surrounding the innocence of childhood.

Eastman Johnson (1824-1906), ‘Cardplay at the Camp’, circa 1861-65.
Oil on canvas. 18⅞ × 29 in (47.9 × 73.6 cm).

5, The sea
While the US government’s ambitions might have been focused on land, many artists turned their attention offshore, creating a tradition of maritime art rooted in America’s seafaring culture. James Edward Buttersworth was born in London but settled in West Hoboken, New Jersey, in 1845, where he created detailed and dramatic paintings of sailing ships. He chronicled the 1851 win by the New York Yacht Club’s schooner America in the Hundred Guinea Cup race in England, and painted the subsequent challenges for the America’s Cup, as it became known, until his death in 1894.

William Bradford (1823-1892), ‘Artist in the Arctic’.
Oil on canvas. 20 × 30 in (50.8 × 76.2 cm).

Fitz Henry Lane lived for much of his life on Massachusetts’s North Shore. His father was a sailmaker but Lane’s early aptitude for drawing led him to work as an apprentice in Pendleton’s lithography shop in Boston for more than a decade. His training allowed him to create meticulously detailed marine paintings that accentuate the play of light.

While he was also part of the Hudson River School, Francis Augustus Silva followed the waterways further out to focus on coastal landscapes, painting scenes around the New York, New Jersey, Rhode Island, and Massachusetts shores.

Francis Augustus Silva (1835-1886), ‘Sunrise at Barnegat Beach, New Jersey’, 1875.
Oil on canvas. 14 × 24 in (35.6 × 61 cm).

 

6, International travel

Louis Rémy Mignot (1831-1870), ‘Lagoon of the Guayaquil, South America’, circa 1863.
Oil on panel. 12¼ × 16½ in (31.1 × 41.9 cm).

Many American artists voyaged to lands outside of the United States in search of inspiration. Between 1863 and 1865, Martin Johnson Heade made frequent trips to Brazil. As an enthusiast of ornithology and botany, he studied and painted the distinct hummingbird families and tropical plants in rich, fine detail. Likewise, in in 1857, Louis Rémy Mignot and acclaimed painter, Fredric Edwin Church travelled to South America to observe the surrounding tropical landscapes and floral subject matter. These expeditions led many artists to develop their style and original creations.

Sandford Robinson Gifford (1823-1880), ‘Sketch on the Roman Campagna’, 1868.
Oil on canvas. 3½ × 7¼ in (8.9 × 18.4 cm).

Source: Christie’s

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