FORGING AN AMERICAN IDENTITY:
FORGING AN AMERICAN IDENTITY:
THE ART OF WILLIAM RANNEY
Â
                               AT PHILADELPHIA MUSEUM OF ART
Â
By Stephen May
PHILADELPHIA, PENN. â A gifted American storyteller in paint, William Tylee Ranney (1813â1857) depicted mythic heroes of his time, both past and present â soldiers, pioneers, trappers, hunters â as exemplars of courage and independence. At a time when the country struggled for national unity and a sense of American identity, Ranney offered an inspiring interpretation of the history, character and future of the United States and its people.
Like so many of his countrymen, Ranney was an optimist, a romantic and a patriot. His paintings, expressing ambitions and concerns of mid-Nineteenth Century citizens, were often reproduced as widely disseminated prints that helped shape the aspirations of a burgeoning nation.
Regarded as an important yet underappreciated American artist, his relative obscurity is due in part to the brevity of his career â he painted for little more than a decade, dying of tuberculosis at age 44.
Well-known and highly respected by his fellow artists, Ranney is best remembered today for his narrative canvases of the settling of the American West. As this exhibition underscores, however, his range of work included portraits, lighthearted genre scenes, hunting and sporting vignettes and historical subjects. The exhibition organizers argue that, âTaken together, Ranneyâs paintings present a portrait of early American life and westward expansion while at the same time evoking a mythology that vividly reflected the artistâs time and place.â
Some 60 works comprise âForging an American Identity: The Art of William Ranney,â on view at the Philadelphia Museum of Art through August 19. It was organized by Sarah E. Boehme, formerly of the Buffalo Bill Historical Center in Cody, Wyo. (where it began its tour) and now director of the Stark Museum of Art in Orange, Texas. She notes that new information about the painter and recently discovered paintings by him offer ânew insightsâ in this âunparalleled gathering of the artistâs most significant paintings.â
Born in Middletown, Conn., the son of a sea captain, Ranney moved at age 13 to Fayetteville, N.C., where he lived with an uncle and trained as a tinsmith. His experiences in this bustling gateway to the West filled his imagination with a grand sense of the American character and landscape.
Moving to Brooklyn around 1833, Ranney began studying drawing and painting. Three years later, inspired by news of the siege of the Alamo, he volunteered to serve in the war for Texas independence. During his brief sojourn in Texas, he absorbed a wealth of observations about the culture, mores and landscape of the American West that would inspire his most famous paintings. His wife Margaret later observed that her husband was âso charmed by everything he sawâ¦the wild enchanting prairies, the splendid horses,â that he never would have returned East âbut for the strong love he had for his mother.â
Back East, Ranney launched his career in earnest; by the early 1840s he was regularly exhibiting figure paintings at the National Academy of Design and the American Art-Union in New York City. He became an associate member of the National Academy in 1850.
After marrying in 1848, Ranney moved to New Jersey, eventually settling in West Hoboken. An enthusiastic sportsman, he filled his studio with hunting and fishing gear, a menagerie of animals and artifacts from the American West â all of which appeared in his paintings.
The popularity of Ranneyâs genre subjects and historical paintings peaked in the mid-1850s, about the time he fell ill with tuberculosis. Reflecting their esteem and affection, several of his artistic contemporaries â including William Sidney Mount and Arthur F. Tait â completed his unfinished canvases and sold them to benefit his widow and two sons.
Largely self-taught, Ranney made up for his lack of formal training by studying the work of contemporaries and closely observing people and places around him. He started out painting straightforward, deftly brushed and remarkably sophisticated portraits. His early âSelf-portrait,â circa 1839, suggests an ambitious young man with a determined gaze. In his later âSelf-portrait,â dating to around 1856, the bewhiskered Ranney maintains the intense air that marked his earlier likeness. Also displayed in the exhibition are affectionate likenesses of family members, including his handsome, serene wife.
Ranneyâs sunny genre images of ordinary people going about their everyday activities responded to widespread enthusiasm for depictions of average, especially middle-class, citizens. In the face of midcentury turmoil over slavery and other issues, the artist consistently conveyed happy messages of harmony and well-being.
Thus, his portrait of an anonymous, ubiquitous New York street urchin, âMatch Boy,â 1845, offers an appealing image of a cherubic, young street merchant peddling his wares. In his far more ambitious, complex figurative paean to the joys of rural childhood, âThe Sleigh Ride,â 1852, conveys the high spirits of a gaggle of rambunctious school children as they pile onto an already overcrowded sleigh for a wintry ride home from their one-room schoolhouse.
As art historian and director of the Ranney catalogue raisonné project Linda Bantel observes, âA plethora of detailsâ¦small sleds, blackboards, books, book bags and a dog yappingâ¦excitedlyâ¦not only add to the confusion but also create a sense of compelling realism and spirited ambience.â âThe Sleigh Rideâ was, understandably, a hit when displayed at the National Academy. Â
An ambitious, deftly composed canvas, âVirginia Wedding,â 1854, which measures 54½ by 82½ inches, captures the festive mood of young revelers gathering on a Southern plantation following an Eighteenth Century wedding.
An avid sportsman himself, Ranney drew on his own experiences and paid careful attention to detail in a series of memorable hunting and fishing scenes set in northern New Jersey marshes. Utilizing the array of hunting equipment in his studio and a collection of dogs and enlisting West Hoboken neighbors as models, he presented anglers and hunters as eager, competent masters of nature and machinery who successfully brought food to the table.
The intense fisherman, watchful dog and the luminous marshland setting in âThe First Fish of the Season,â 1849, reflect the painterâs familiarity with such scenes. In recording what Bantel terms the ârealistic details of everyday objectsâ and conveying the âemotional and practical experience of all fisherman,â Ranney created a masterpiece of sporting art.
As a duck hunter himself, Ranneyâs knowledge of the tactics, excitement and enjoyment of the sport, combined with his ability to capture mirrorlike, tranquil marsh water, make âDuck Shooters,â 1849, a memorable image. The tense eagerness of the hunters and their dog are palpable, in contrast to the luminist-inspired tranquility of the scene.
âSetter with Woodcock,â circa 1855, is a large-scale, empathetic depiction of what was likely a specific setter, shown waiting obediently for his unseen master to claim a bird from his mouth.
A staunch patriot, Ranney underscored his pride in the nationâs past by depicting inspirational scenes from American history, particularly the American Revolution. He often showed such military leaders as George Washington and General Francis (âSwamp Foxâ) Marion as heroic figures with an empathy for those under their command. As the exhibition organizers put it, âHis unusual interest in the ordinary, nameless citizen-soldier expressed Ranneyâs own democratic outlook and the heartfelt values of patriotism and fortitude that his paintings meant to convey to his audience.â
In âMarion Crossing the Pedee,â circa 1850, the âSwamp Foxâ â at the far left on horseback â mingles with his motley band of followers as they traverse the Pedee River in South Carolina around 1780. Marion is shown as part of a crowded group â in contrast to the focus on Washington above the crowd in Emmanuel Leutzeâs famed âWashington Crossing the Delaware,â painted about the same time and shown in New York in 1851.
âVeterans of 1776 Returning from the War,â 1848, portrays lighthearted citizen-soldiers coming home at the end of the American Revolution. Painted at the time of the Mexican War, Ranneyâs image reinforced the idea that war veterans were both nation-builders and freedom fighters.
Images of episodes when Daniel Boone and his equally intrepid brother Squire explored the Kentucky frontier were popular Ranney subjects. In several paintings, he depicted Daniel and a hardy group of followers as they first viewed the panorama of the Kentucky wilderness from the Cumberland Mountains.
âSquire Boone Crossing the Mountains with Stores for his Brother Daniel, Encamped in the Wilds of Kentucky,â 1852, highlights the stoic resolve of the sibling returning from the East leading a pack horse loaded with supplies for Daniel, who had remained behind to protect their hunting claims. The alert pose and focused gaze of the rider suggest that he has heard something that might signal nearby Indians. âRanney used Squire to represent the larger symbolic vanguard of civilization and a view that implies that the East would be the provider for the West,â observes art historian Peter H. Hassrick in the catalog.
Greatly influenced by his observations during his sojourn in Texas, Ranney presented the West as a place of open land, wild mustangs â and opportunity for sturdy pioneers. Starting in the 1840s, after he came back East, he celebrated the strong individualism and manly virtues of Mexican, French and American trappers and vaqueros who sought furs, horses and land in newly opened regions. Ranney especially admired qualities of courage, determination, strength and initiative that helped fabled âmountain menâ conquer the frontier.
Although the era of the trapper was fading, Ranney immortalized their fortitude and adventurousness in paintings and engravings that showed them in peril. In âThe Trapperâs Last Shot,â circa 1850, a lone horseman, apparently running out of ammunition, peers at a group of distant Indians whom he has eluded thus far. His terrorized horse, frozen in place, adds to the palpable sense of danger in this engraving.
In the somewhat romanticized âThe Wounded Trapper,â 1850, a fallen mountain man clings to his wildly rearing horse, presumably as Native Americans close in for the kill. Hassrick suggests the image was inspired by an engraving that Ranney had probably seen of a painting by French artist Theodore Gericault.
âThe Lassoâ and âHunting Wild Horses,â both 1846, celebrate the daring and skill of Mexican vaqueros (models for American cowboys) as they pursued wild mustangs in the Southwest. Struggles between cowherds, representing the advance of civilization, and untamed horses, symbolizing freedom and the spirit of the West, had undoubtedly been observed by Ranney in Texas.
Responding to widespread national interest in pioneering life on the frontier, Ranney put a human/family face on groups on the westward trail. In âAdvice on the Prairie,â circa 1853, a grizzled mountain man offers counsel to a family heading West. As Hassrick points out, the Madonna-like mother and child evoke the Holy Family en route to the Promised Land, as part of the countryâs Manifest Destiny.
The promise of the West lies in the distance in âHalt on the Plains [or Prairie],â 1857 as three riders look to the journey ahead, while horses, cattle and dogs rest amidst a sweeping landscape shimmering in color and detail. âFor American audiences,â observes Hassrick, âRanneyâs trappersâ¦were common men of noble but protean habitâ¦.[T]his work...can be construed as a national picture, an unabashed tribute to the then-celebrated pioneer spirit.â
This ambitious and optimistic canvas was undertaken when the artist was in poor health; he died of tuberculosis that year. In his relatively brief career, William Ranney created a remarkable oeuvre of some 150 paintings that captured the can-do mentality and forward-looking attitude of a nation proud of its revolutionary heritage and focused on limitless opportunities that lay ahead. It is good that this overlooked painter â this is the first comprehensive exhibition of his art in 40 years â who reflected so much of the spirit and values of mid-Nineteenth Century America is given his just due.
The 226-page catalog, written by Bantel and Hassrick, with essays by Boehme and Mark F. Bockrath, includes a compilation of all of Ranneyâs known works and commentaries on major paintings and works on paper. Published by Buffalo Bill Historical Society, it sells for $59.95 (hardcover).
The Philadelphia Museum of Art is on Benjamin Franklin Parkway at 26th Street. For information, 215-763-8100 or www.philamuseum.org.
Â
Forging An American Identity: The Art Of William Ranney At Philadelphia Museum Of Art
Â
Forging An American Identity: The Art Of William Ranney
Forging An American Identity
The Art Of William Ranney
By Stephen May
WEB
06 â Hunting Wild Hors⦠-
Ranney immortalized the skill and daring of Mexican vaqueros and the strength and beauty of untamed mustangs in paintings like âHunting Wild Horses,â 1846. Here, four wild-eyed steeds circle a terrified mustang who has been lassoed by an intrepid rider. Museum of the American West, Autry National Center, Los Angeles.
08 â Match Boy.jpg â
Ranney rendered an optimistic view of New York City street urchins who peddled matches, flowers, fruit and newspapers in âMatch Boy,â 1845. The pink cheeks and relatively neat appearance of this young entrepreneur belie the dangers and grime that confronted underclass youngsters in congested neighborhoods. Private collection.
17 â Veterans of 1776 Re⦠-
Ranney celebrated the crucial role of citizen-soldiers in the struggle for independence in âVeterans of 1776 Returning from the War,â 1848. Here, a happy group of veterans head home to enjoy the freedoms they helped secure in the American Revolution. Dallas Museum of Art.
Duck shooters.jpg â
An experienced sportsman himself, Ranney infused paintings like âDuck Hunters,â 1849, with his knowledge of the strategies and challenges of hunting in marshes near his New Jersey home/studio. Here, all three figures lean forward expectantly as they eye several ducks to the far right, all enveloped in a glowing atmosphere. Museum of Fine Arts, Boston.
Trapperâs Last Shot.jpg â
Thanks to wide distribution of prints by the Western Art-Union, âThe Trooperâs Last Shot,â 1850, based on a painting by Ranney, became one of his best-known images. Here, the endangered trapper, down to his last bullet, eyes distant Indians who have been pursuing him, an image that underscored dangers faced by pioneers in the West. Private collection
William ranney 05 â
In his late âSelf-portrait,â circa 1856â1857, Ranney presented himself as a thoughtful, intense, mature figure, whose profession is indicated by the barely visible end of a paint brush at the bottom of the picture. Private collection.
05 â first Fish of the Season.jpg â
Ranney combined his interests in portraiture, landscapes and sporting subjects in âFirst Fish of the Season,â 1849. The intense fisherman and his alert dog suggest the challenges of fishing in New Jersey marshes, replete with romantic reflections from the mirrorlike water. Private collection.
07 âMarion Crossing t⦠-
In this large â 501/8 by 743/8 inches â painting, âMarion Crossing the Pedee,â 1850, Ranney showed Revolutionary War hero General Francis Marion, on horseback at the far left, and his band of followers crossing a river on a crowded barge. The âSwamp Foxâ and his self-armed, unpaid militia specialized in ambushing the British and then disappearing into the bogs and marshes of South Carolina. Amon Carter Museum.
09 â Halt on the Prairie.jpg â
Painted in the last year of his life, Ranneyâs âHalt on the Plains [or Prairie],â 1857, features a brilliant palette in an optimistic canvas that shimmers with color and detail. Ambitious and large â 47¼ by 72¾ inches â it represents the artistâs final celebration of the promise of the American West. Private collection.
10 â Portrait of Margaret R⦠-
Ranney depicted his Irish-born wife in âPortrait of Margaret Ranney,â circa 1850, as a handsome, serene lady in a demure velvet gown. Married in 1848, the couple had two sons. Cromwell (Conn.) Historical Society.
11 â Self Portrait-earl⦠-
Painted around 1839, Ranneyâs early âSelf-portraitâ demonstrates sophistication and talent unusual for such a young, self-taught artist. He may have created this likeness to demonstrate his skills to potential patrons. Private collection.
14 â Squire Boone Cros⦠-
âSquire Boone Crossing the Mountains with Stores for His Brother Daniel, Encamped in the Wilds of Kentucky,â 1852, offers Ranneyâs take on an episode in 1770 during the Boone brothersâ explorations in Kentucky, when one sibling returned to civilization to obtain provisions for his legendary brother. Such images were reminders of the challenges and dangers confronting frontiersmen. Museum of Fine Arts, Springfield, Mass.
Â
16 â Virginia Wedding.jpg â
âVirginia Wedding,â 1854, measuring a sizeable 541/8 by 82½ inches, takes a nostalgic look at folks arriving at a Southern plantation for a festive celebration of an Eighteenth Century wedding. Ranney never visited Virginia, but he had happy memories of the South from having lived in North Carolina. The R.W. Norton Art Gallery, Shreveport, La.
Advice on the Prairie.jpg â
Ranneyâs âAdvice on the Prairie,â 1853, showing a veteran mountain man sharing his knowledge of the way ahead with a pioneering family headed West, responded to Eastern audiences eager for narratives about the frontier. Buffalo Bill Historical Center.
Setter with Woodcock.jpg â
As a veteran hunter himself, Ranney had a special empathy for setters who accompanied bird-hunting forays, as epitomized by the faithful canine in âSpaniel with Woodcock,â circa 1855, who waits for his unseen master to claim a bird from his mouth. The Merestead Painting Collection, The Westchester County Department of Parks, Recreation and Conservation.
The Sleigh Ride.jpg â
In âThe Sleigh Ride,â 1852, Ranneyâs homage to the joys of rural childhood, lively youngsters emerging from a one-room schoolhouse crowd onto a sleigh driven by a kindly farmer for a ride across a snowy landscape. The Manoogian Collection.
William ranney image 02 â
The imperiled mountain man, clinging to his rearing horse in âThe Wounded Trapper,â 1850, symbolized the vulnerability and isolation of these frontiersmen. This image resembles a famous French Romantic military painting, Theodore Gericaultâs âThe Wounded Cuirassier,â 1814, which Ranney may have known from prints. Private collection.
Â