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American Art & Literature. From the Eighteenth Century to the Present. The American Colonies and the Emerging Nation. Portraiture Landscapes Sculptures. In Europe this is the Period of REALISM And the Colonials who are EUROPEANS Mimic that art.
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American Art & Literature From the Eighteenth Century to the Present
The American Colonies and the Emerging Nation • Portraiture • Landscapes • Sculptures In Europe this is the Period of REALISM And the Colonials who are EUROPEANS Mimic that art
John Singleton Copley (1738-1815)Watson and the Shark (1778)
John Singleton CopleyMargaret Kemble Gage(1771)Mrs. Daniel Rogers (Elizabeth Gorham Rogers) (1762)
John Singleton CopleyThe Death of Major Peirson 6 January 1781 (1783)
Charles Willson Peale (1741-1827)The Artist in his Museum, 1822Portrait of George Washington, 1782
Gilbert Stuart (1755-1828)Portrait of George Washington (1796) Mrs. Perez Morton (1802)
Early Nineteenth-Century Art • The Hudson River School and the Lure of the West European artists turn away from realism 1800-1840 in reaction against Industrialism, almost constant war and the growing scientific attempt to rationally quantify EVERYTHING. The Romantics emphasize FEELINGS!! This same process happens in America – but with AMERICAN themes and subjects.
The Hudson River School: 1820s-1870s
The Hudson River School • These artists captured the undiluted power of nature • Paint the nation’s most spectacular and undeveloped areas [the new Garden of Eden]. • Nature was the best source of wisdom & fulfillment. • They created visual embodiments of the ideals of the Transcendentalists. * painting is the vehicle through which the universal mind could reach the mind of mankind. * art is the agent of moral & spiritual transformation.
Characteristics of the Hudson River School “A new art for a new land.” Paint grand, scenic vistas. Humans are an insignificant [even non-existent] part of the picture. Experiment with affects of light on water and sky. Symbol of the school --> a broken tree stump
Issues/Themes Addressed by the Antebellum Artists • Transcendentalist thinking. • Westward expansion. • American nationalism --> What is America? * creation of a national mythology • Racism and Native Americans. • Concern for political extremism. • The price paid for progress and the advances of civilization.
The Course of Empire: The Arcadian or The Pastoral State - Thomas Cole, 1836
Watercolors by John Audubon Stanley Hawk Barred Owl
Fur Trappers Descending the MissouriGeorge Caleb Bingham, 1845
The Classical Styles of Greece & Rome
Horatio Greenough (1805-1852)George Washington, 1840Rescue, 1853
Patriotic Art
Washington Crossing the DelawareEmmanuel Gottlieb Leutze,1851
The "Frontier" Artists
Young Omahaw, War Eagle, Little Missouri, and Pawnees - Charles Bird King, 1821 1. The “Noble Savage” Image
Mato-Tope – Karl Bodmer, 1830s 3. The “Demonic” Indian
Last of the Race – Tompkins Matteson, 1847 4. The “Doomed” Indian
Dying Indian Chief Contemplating the Progress of Civilization – Thomas Crawford, 1857
Childe Hassam (1859-1935)Union Square in Spring, 1896 The South Ledges, Appledore, 1913
Winslow Homer (1836-1910)A Fair Wind, 1876The Gulf Stream, 1899
The Ashcan School of Artists In Europe a short revival in realism is Also reflected in Amerca’s American Realism
Conservative in style, they were revolutionary in content. • Departure from the staid portraitures and genteel landscapes of the late 19c. • The intent of the artists was not social commentary.
Characteristics of the Ashcan School 1.Gritty, urban scenes: - find beauty in the drab and ugly aspects of life.
“A Woman’s Work” John Sloan, 1912
Characteristics of the Ashcan School 2.Portrayal of urban vitality.