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| All photographs taken
by Yvonne Weisberg and courtesy The Minneapolis Institute of
Arts, Minneapolis |
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| Fig. 1 Interior view of "American
Sublime: Landscape Painting in the United States, 18201880,"
with Asher B. Durand's Kindred Spirits of 1849 at entrance
to exhibition. |
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"American Sublime: Landscape Painting in
the United States, 18201880"
Tate Britain, London
21 February19 May 2002
Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, Philadelphia
17 June25 August 2002
The Minneapolis Institute of Arts, Minneapolis
22 September17 November 2002
Andrew Wilton and Tim Barringer
American Sublime: Landscape Painting in the United States, 1820-1880
London: Tate Publishing, 2002
284 pp.; 106 color ills., 33 b/w ills.; index, bibliography; $35.00 (paperback)
ISBN 1854373870
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No image could have been more fitting to welcome visitors to the recent
"American Sublime" exhibition at The Minneapolis Institute of
Arts than Asher B. Durand's Kindred Spirits. Painted in 1849, this
classic work exemplifies America's early dedication to its native landscape
as a defining image of an emerging national culture (fig. 1). As an introduction
to this exhibition, Kindred Spirits is both a cherished, familiar
image and a synopsis of the core characteristics associated with early
nineteenth-century landscape painting in the United States. Compositionally,
Durand used techniques inherited from the idealized seventeenth-century
landscapes of Claude Lorraine, but the sensibility is decidedly contemporary
and romantic. In fact, Kindred Spirits is a tribute to his friend
and fellow painter Thomas Cole, who died unexpectedly in 1848, and the
poet William Cullen Bryant, a close friend of both Cole and Durand. The
dual portrait of painter and poet in the pristine Catskill Mountains setting
speaks to the importance that this generation of artists felt for the
untouched natural beauty of the American landscape, as well as the reverence
they expressed for wild, awe-inspiring imagery.
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| Fig. 2 Frederic Edwin Church, Rainy
Season in the Tropics, 1866. Oil on canvas. Fine Arts Museums
of San Francisco |
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The exhibition
was organized by the Tate Britain and traveled to the Pennsylvania Academy
of the Fine Arts before arriving at The Minneapolis Institute of Arts, its
final venue. The curators of the exhibition, Andrew Wilton, Keeper and Senior
Research Fellow at the Tate Britain, and Tim Barringer, Assistant Professor,
Department of the History of Art at Yale University, offered a fresh perspective
by presenting this material as a dialogue between British and American landscape
painting. This approach demonstrates the dependence of American painters
on British pictorial traditions, as well as their eventual departure from
those conventions in pursuit of a vision better suited to their native environment.
The design of the exhibition followed the thematic structure of the catalogue,
with each gallery devoted to a specific concept such as wilderness, transcendentalism,
or exploration. In Minneapolis, the exhibition was designed around a muted
palette of grays, blues, plums, and greens that showcased the often-vibrant
hues of the landscapes depicted in the paintings. This served the viewer
well, as the background did not compete with the paintings. In addition,
the use of freestanding wall panels at gallery entrances created a surprising
rhythm as the viewer moved from one space to the next. In the case of Frederic
Edwin Church's Rainy Season in the Tropics of 1866, the presentation
was especially dramatic; the solitary wall panel swagged in burgundy velvet
drapery enshrined the "Great Picture," just as the artist had
originally exhibited it (fig. 2). Although the effect is not quite the same
as seeing it in a gas-lit room in post-Civil War New York City, it was nonetheless
an important attempt at educating contemporary viewers about the nature
of the mid-nineteenth-century art market in the United States. Church labeled
many paintings "Great Pictures" because they were large in both
scale and concept; and because the tag line attracted a wide audience to
his exhibitions. Meticulous attention to flora and fauna combined with a
remarkable mastery of panoramic spaces enabled Church to articulate his
belief that the natural world was a reflection of the divine. Some paintings,
such as Rainy Season in the Tropics or Twilight in the Wilderness
of 1860, may have had political overtones as well. Scholars, including co-curator
Barringer, see both of these works as commentaries on the American Civil
War. Twilight in the Wilderness, with its setting sun reflected in
the blood-colored lake, is an intensely emotive image. Given its date of
1860 and Church's documented concerns about the growing strife between the
North and South, it is understandable that this dramatic landscape can be
interpreted as a premonition of war. Rainy Season in the Tropics,
painted six years later, transports the viewer to a sunlit, rainbow-laden
paradise, an expression of hope in post-war America. |
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Didactic material for the exhibition drew
from the catalogue andwith one unexplained exceptionevery painting
had a detailed label. In spite of museum-world debates about whether or
not to provide substantive labels, it would appear that viewers appreciate
them thoroughly. There is also an advantage to layering didactic material
such as labels, wall information plaques, and catalogue texts; it allows
viewers to gradually deepen their understanding of the material as each
level of information provides an increasingly detailed and scholarly critique.
Viewers can choose to participate at whatever level suits them best. In
this exhibition, a single theme defined each gallery, offering an intellectual
structure for the display of the paintings. Rainy Season in the Tropics,
for example, was included in a gallery dedicated to the theme of exploration,
an appropriate context in which to present Church's South American paintings
or his small oil sketches of the far north. |
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Fig. 3 Thomas Cole, The Course
of Empire: Destruction and Desolation, 1836.
Oil on canvas. The New York Public Library. |
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For those familiar with American landscape
painting, this exhibition provided the opportunity of experiencing an impressive
range of well-known images. Seeing Thomas Cole's 183436 series The
Course of Empire, for example, is an entirely different experience when
all five paintings are seen together. Only then can the viewer appreciate
the fact that the central image, Consummation (fig. 3), is much larger
than the other four paintings. Details that are difficult to see in reproductions
are more readily discernable as well. For example, the red-robed emperor
returning from victorious conquest in Consummation stands out brilliantly
in the original, whereas he appears only as a modest figure in even the
best of reproductions. Stylistic changes are also more evident. Cole altered
his technique in response to his subject, moving from the smoothly finished
Claudean arcadia of The Pastoral to the scumbled paint of Desolation.
Viewing all five paintings together prompts the question of interpretation.
Certainly the artist intended his series as an allegory of empire building
in general, but the question of whether or not it was also meant as a comment
on specific empires must be asked. Throughout the exhibition, the didactic
materials raise the comparison between the British Empire under Queen Victoria's
rule and the American Empire that was being created by relentless expansion
across the continent. Was Cole's allegory a cautionary tale for both nations?
His disenchantment with industrialization was well known and, as Barringer
notes in the catalogue (p. 52), Cole was also disillusioned with President
Andrew Jackson's policies of territorial expansion and Indian "relocation."
The untainted paradise of early America was succumbing to the lure of the
steam engine just as Britain hadand Cole saw this as the destruction
of deeply embedded American ideals. In his final painting of the series,
Desolation, the artist reflected an unexpectedly grim outlook for
a nation whose rhetoric promised life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness. |
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This is where American landscape painters
of the nineteenth century part company with the British tradition that had
sustained them initially. Issues of composition and technique take second
place to the social and moral questions posed by the issue of slavery, the
Indian Reform Act of 1830, the annexation of vast territories west of the
Mississippi River, and the gradual realization that the colonization of
the American west meant an end to the wilderness. For many artists, the
question was not about evoking a pre-industrial agricultural world or celebrating
the dynamism of speed and steam, but about the morality of intentionally
destroying an untainted wilderness. As Thomas Cole noted in his diary on
July 6, 1835: "The painter of American scenery has indeed privileges
superior to any other; all nature here is new to Art" (quoted on p.
51). This very newness brought a unique set of responsibilities to the American
artist, and as the century progressed, the question of what those were became
more and more pressing. |
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| Fig. 4 Frederic Edwin Church, Cotopaxi,
1862. Oil on canvas. Detroit Institute of Arts |
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American landscape painters responded in
a variety of ways. Church saw the landscape as an expression of a Christian
God's divine plan for all eternity. He tried to represent the beauty of
that universal design in his exquisitely detailed panoramic paintings such
as Cotopaxi (fig. 4). His contemporary, Sanford Robinson Gifford,
evoked the untamed, luminous world of Maine in The Wilderness of
1860, in which the only sign of human habitation is an Indian woman with
a child on her back awaiting her husband as he glides home in a canoe. The
image is carefully composed around Mount Katahdin, remote and serene against
a gold-tinged sky. Like the woman on the shore, the viewer luxuriates, if
only for a moment, in an American wilderness in which human beings lived
in harmony with nature. |
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| Fig. 5 Interior view of "American
Sublime: Landscape Painting in the United States, 1820-1880,"
with Fitz Hugh Lane's seascapes Becalmed off Halway Rock, 1860;
"Starlight" in Fog, 1860; Owl's Head, Penobscot
Bay, Maine, 1862 |
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| Fig. 6 Martin Johnson Heade, Thunderstorm
at the Shore, 187071. Oil on paper on canvas. Carnegie Museum
of Art, Pittsburgh |
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| Fig. 7 John Frederick Kensett,
Eaton's Neck, Long Island, 1872. Oil on canvas. The Metropolitan
Museum of Art, New York |
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| Fig. 8 Interior view of "American
Sublime: Landscape Painting in the United States, 18201880,"
with Martin Johnson Heade's paintings of New England salt marshes:
Sunrise on the Marshes, 1863; Sudden Shower, Newbury Marshes,
186575; Marshfield Meadows, 1878 |
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Several artists who can only be tangentially
described as painters of the sublime landscapeJohn Frederick Kensett,
Fitz Hugh Lane (fig. 5), and Martin Johnson Headeresponded slightly
differently. Their inclusion in the exhibition is appropriate only if one
considers the metaphysical intensity of American transcendentalism to be
an expression of the Sublime. The drama typically associated with the sublime
landscape is missing here, replaced by an eerie calm. These painters also
display new formal concerns that hint at the approaching modernist fascination
with pattern and abstraction. An example of this is Heade's Thunderstorm
at the Shore of 187071, a small oil sketch of a blackened sky
against a golden beach with a retreating billow of white cloud in the distance
(fig. 6). The figures and boats in the painting function neither like the
staffage of Claude nor the allegorical figures of Cole. Rather, this painting
recalls the direct observation of nature that characterized Barbizon images
or perhaps even Gustave Courbet's seascapes. |
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John Frederick Kensett's Eaton's Neck,
Long Island of 1872 exhibits an even greater concern with formal abstraction
(fig. 7). The exaggerated horizontal format is mathematically sectioned
into thirds, with the motionless green water of Long Island Sound occupying
the bottom third of the left side of the composition. Balancing this element
are a swath of chalky beach and a shrub-covered dune on the right, which
are presented as flat shapes against the pale sky. On the horizon are barely
perceptible white sails. Kensett moved into unexplored territory here, verging
on pure abstraction; water, sky, and earth are fundamental elements rather
than specific topographical details. This simplification of form and shape
is likewise characteristic of Fitz Hugh Lane, an artist who worked in relative
solitude in Gloucester, Massachusetts. His 1864 painting, Brace's Rock,
Brace's Cove, illustrates a striking interplay of light and dark shapes
silhouetted against the sky and water. Reflections in the water become solid,
flat patterns of color and shape instead of the expected wavering forms.
The solitary disintegrating sailboat stranded on the beach, traditionally
a symbol of life's transience, is also an innovative structure built of
intersecting horizontals of light and dark forms. It is tempting to speculate
on whether or not the artist had knowledge of Japanese prints, which might
have offered a source for this type of compositional organization. |
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No discussion of the exhibition would be
complete without mentioning Martin Johnson Heade's series of paintings of
the salt marshes along the New England coast, a subject that he revisited
repeatedly from the late 1850s until the late 1870s (fig. 8). The basic
elements in these paintings are haystacks, meandering streams, and vast
open skies. All present some indication of human activity, whether in the
form of an abandoned hay wagon or the figure of a fisherman or a farmer.
In subject matter, Heade's paintings are distantly akin to Constable's inhabited
agricultural landscapes or perhaps even Jean-François Millet's and
Jules Breton's images of gleaners from the 1850s. In composition, however,
there is the same insistent horizontality that is present in both Kensett's
and Lane's paintings. The spare landscape and the geometrical purity of
the haystacks suggest a search for an underlying structure in nature. Indeed,
Heade moved the haystacks around like chessmen on a board defined by interlocking
horizontal elements of earth and water. Seen as a series of paintings, it
becomes clear that the haystacks are markers in space, formal elements that
delineate the scale of this coastal landscape. |
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The final theme of "American Sublime"
was the exploration of the western frontier. These outsized paintings depicting
the dramatic landscapes of the American West offered a grand finale to an
exhibition already filled with many grand gestures. The introductory label
provided a supportive historical framework but, for the most part, the paintings
spoke for themselves. |
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| Fig. 9 Interior view of "American
Sublime: Landscape Painting in the United States, 18201880,"
with Thomas Moran's Hiawatha, 186768 and Hiawatha
and the Great Serpent, the Kenabeek, 1867 |
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In the context of this exhibition, the "West"
begins in Minnesota. Thomas Moran's series of paintings based on Henry Wadsworth
Longfellow's "Song of Hiawatha" resulted from the artist's 1860
trip to Lake Superior, where much of the poetic saga is set. In 1867-68,
Moran painted his first image of Hiawatha using a dark charcoal palette
highlighted only by sparse gleams of red to indicate campfires on the rocky
shore of the great lake Gitche-gumee (fig. 9). The scene depicts a confrontation
between the hero Hiawatha and the evil magician Megissogwon, who is shown
as a shadowy giant perched on the rocky cliffs above the lake. This painting
and its companion piece from the same time, Hiawatha and the Great Serpent,
the Kenabeek, must be understood in the context of complex mid-nineteenth-century
perceptions about Native Americans. In writing the "Song of Hiawatha,"
Longfellow intended to cast Native Americans in the heroic context of an
epic poem modeled on the Finnish Kalevala, and it is crucial to remember
that the poet neither visited the sites of his poem nor had any contact
with living Native American culture. Moran, however, did visit Lake Superior
and he based his landscapes on sketches from his trip. This problematic
patchwork is further complicated by Moran's reliance on the stylistic technique
of J. M. W. Turner. The intense atmospheric colors, particularly in Fiercely,
the Red Sun Descending Burned his Way along the Heavens, painted in
1875, is a direct descendant of Turner's late paintings, such as his Slave
Ship of 1840. Like the poem on which it is based, Moran's Hiawatha paintings
are intended to capture a people and a way of life that were in rapid decline
by mid-century, but they paid tribute to this sad chapter of American history
with the tools of the colonizing culture. (A minor question about the Minneapolis
installation is why the local setting of Longfellow's poem was not addressed
in the didactic materials since Minnehaha Falls is less than five miles
from The Minneapolis Institute of Arts.) |
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| Fig. 10 Albert Bierstadt, Storm
in the Rocky Mountains-Mount Rosalie, 1866. Oil on canvas. Brooklyn
Museum of Art, Brooklyn, NY |
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| Fig. 11 Thomas Moran, Grand
Canyon of the Colorado, 1892. Oil on canvas. Philadelphia Museum
of Art, Philadelphia |
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"American Sublime" is equally
rich in the work of Albert Bierstadt, who painted the natural wonders of
the Colorado Rocky Mountains, Yosemite Valley, and Puget Sound in the 1860s.
These pictures are enormous. They pull viewers into the landscape and overwhelm
them with the grandeur of the towering mountains. Light pours through clouds
to reveal an untouched wild beauty painted with great attention to topographical
detail. Storm in the Rocky Mountains, Mount Rosalie of 1866 is typical
(fig. 10). Storm clouds pile up in the distance, but brilliant light still
streams through to illuminate the crystal water of the mountain lake. A
copse of pine trees stands silhouetted against the gleaming, golden light,
marking the center of the composition and giving the viewer a focal point
in this awe-inspiring landscape. In the foreground, a dimly lit alpine meadow
reveals the presence of human hunters chasing their fleeing quarry. A tiny
Indian village appears in the lower left corner of the painting, thoroughly
dwarfed by the surrounding environment. Like most of Bierstadt's landscapes,
this one consists of elements taken from several locations, and the scale
is considerably exaggerated. However, Bierstadt very capably captured the
spirit of the West that had already become part of the American mythic consciousness
by the 1860s. As Barringer notes in the catalogue, it was Bierstadt's paintings
of Yosemite Valley that persuaded President Abraham Lincoln to sign into
law the bill that would preserve it from development; similarly, it was
Moran's images, together with William Henry Jackson's photographs, that
convinced President Ulysses S. Grant to designate Yellowstone as a national
park in 1872 (p. 60). |
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The exhibition concludes with a stunning
composition by Moran (fig. 11). Painted in 1892, this vast canvas places
the viewer at the top of the Grand Canyon, looking down on this magnificent
natural phenomenon from mid-air. The sublime perspective of gazing up at
Bierstadt's mountains has shifted to a position of physical superiority,
surveying the land from above. The West had been won. |
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Janet L. Whitmore, Ph.D.
Adjunct Assistant Professor
College of Architecture and Landscape Architecture
University of Minnesota
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© 20023 Nineteenth-Century Art
Worldwide and Janet Whitmore. All Rights Reserved. |
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