At Wadsworth Atheneum Museum Of Art
At Wadsworth Atheneum Museum Of Art
By Laura Beach
HARTFORD â The 19th Century was the age of self-invention. Versatile Americans of exceptional ambition and intellect sought their fortunes wherever they could, the countryâs vast frontier providing fertile opportunity.
The most famous self-invented man of his time was Hartford firearms maker Samuel Colt (1814-1862). As a 16-year-old at sea in 1830, Colt whittled a prototype of the mechanism that would result in his patented revolver. Still casting about two years later, he toured the East Coast giving laughing gas demonstrations under the stage name âDr Coult.â After a series of spectacular business failures, an occupational hazard for habitual risk-takers, Colt became a global celebrity and an immensely wealthy man.
âSamuel Colt: Arms, Art and Invention,â the enterprising exhibition at the Wadsworth Atheneum through March 4, tells the complicated tale of the intertwining lives of Samuel Colt and another self-invented man, George Catlin (1796-1872), the painter renowned for his sympathetic portraits of Native Americans and stirring visions of the American West.
Colt and Catlin had much in common, says Elizabeth Mankin Kornhauser, editor of the accompanying catalog Samuel Colt: Arms, Art and Invention and the Wadsworth Atheneumâs Krieble curator of American painting and sculpture. Both men, she writes, âwere natural showmen and shrewd marketers who were not above stretching the truth to make a point.â
Linking the two men forever in history is a series of ten paintings, six of which Colt reproduced as lithographs, that Catlin made for his patron in 1884 and 1885. Late last year, the museum announced that it had purchased four of the paintings, which â painted for promotional purposes â depict the artist in exotic Western or South American settings using Colt firearms. From New Haven, Conn., dealer William Reese the Atheneum acquired a pristine set of the lithographs rendered by John McGahey and printed by Day & Son of London and Chester in 1855. âSamuel Coltâ displays these important acquisitions alongside two other paintings from the Colt Firearms Series, loans from the Max and Carolyn Williams Family Trust and the Memorial Art Gallery in Rochester, N.Y.
Ms Kornhauserâs fascination with the Colt-Catlin connection began when, hoping to add a major Catlin to the Atheneumâs already outstanding collection of 19th Century American landscape painting, she sought advice from two Catlin scholars, Nancy Anderson at the National Gallery and William Truettner at the Smithsonian American Art Museum, both in Washington, D.C. After putting out the word to dealers in New York City, Ms Kornhauser was soon alerted to the four paintings. After her husbandâs death, Elizabeth Colt had given the Colt Firearms Series pictures to her sister. The Atheneumâs four pictures were still in family hands.
âI was fascinated with the Colt-Catlin story but frustrated by the lack of information. I didnât know basic details, such as how many paintings were in the series,â Kornhauser recalls.
Working with Ms Anderson, the curator began teasing apart the tale, a project that involved firming up the fuzzy chronology of Catlinâs painting trips to South America. New Colt documents surfaced, but it took Herbert G. Houze, a Colt authority and firearms historian from Cody, Wyo., to interpret them. Mr Houze cataloged the Colt firearms collection and wrote most of the catalog. Technology historian Carolyn C. Cooper of Yale assessed Coltâs industrial contributions. Ms Kornhauser wrote about the fine art in the show.
âI think the current exhibition really started with our desire to bring the Colt firearms collection to light in a serious way,â Ms Kornhauser recalls. Making sense of the unwieldy Colt trove â which besides firearms includes paintings, decorative art and memorabilia â has challenged past Atheneum curators, who have mounted displays in 1910, 1961 and 1996.
âThe present exhibition and publication,â writes museum director Willard Holmes, âmarks the first time that the Wadsworth Atheneum has thoroughly documented its world-famous collection of Colt firearms.â
Arranged on one floor in the Susan Morse Hilles Gallery, âSamuel Coltâ presents 179 objects, among them inventorâs patents and designs, a 15th Century Chinese hand cannon, pistols and rifles of every description, counterfeits, medals, paintings, miniatures, snuffboxes, lacquer ware, brocade and diamond presentation rings. There are even Japanese matchlock guns given to Colt by Tokugawa Yoshinobu and his court in appreciation for the firearms Colt delivered to Japan via Commodore Matthew C. Perry.
Particularly ingenious is a display of mid-19th Century photographs of factory workers operating the machinery that made Coltâs state-of-the-art South Meadows Armory the envy of the world. From the collection of the Museum of Connecticut History, the images are projected on a gallery wall on a rotating basis.
Another imaginative touch is the stylized pavilion at the center of the hall. Perhaps meant to suggest the interior of a cupola, it houses four meticulously rendered oils on panel. The birdâs-eye views of Hartford â looking north, south, east and west â were painted in 1855 by Joseph Ropes. Colt, organizers suggest, looked past Hartfordâs parochial limits to the world beyond and wanted his fellow citizens to do the same.
Significantly, the exhibition unites Coltâs personal collection of arms. In his office at the time of his death, the weapons are now divided between the Wadsworth Atheneum and the Museum of Connecticut History.
âWeâve put the pieces back together,â Mr Houze says with satisfaction.
Another loan from the Museum of Connecticut History is the Rampant Colt, the majestic gilded zinc statue of a rearing horse with a broken spear in his mouth that once capped the onion dome of Coltâs Armory. Litchfield dealer Peter Tillou purchased the famous figure, one of the worldâs first corporate logos, in 1990 and offered it at the Fall Antiques Show in New York City before it was acquired by Pratt & Whitney Company Foundation, Inc., for the museum.
The Rampant Colt greets visitors in an introductory foyer painted the same electric-blue as the signature onion-shaped Colt dome visible from Interstate 91 south of Hartford. The dome was built in 1855, destroyed by fire in 1864, and rebuilt by 1866. Colt firearms were produced at the South Meadows Armory until 1994. Under review this fall is a proposal to make the 216-acre Coltsville Historic Industrial District a unit of the National Park System. A final recommendation will be submitted to the Secretary of the Interior and Congress in 2007.
âWe wanted to express through design the key personality traits and character of Samuel Colt. He was a promoter and inventor, a citizen of Hartford and the world. We also wanted to balance the display of firearms with fine and decorative arts,â says exhibit designer Cecil Adams, who painted gallery walls in an earthy palette of leather brown and sky blue.
âThere is no right or wrong way to tour the show,â says Mr Houze, who hopes viewers will proceed at their own pace, according to personal interest.
âColt redefined the architecture of handguns, designing revolvers so that they were immediately recognizable as his product. He chose attractive finishes and clean, symmetrical lines,â says the guest curator, who regards Colt as a master of industrial design. Fine craftsmanship is an overarching theme of the show, which unites otherwise disparate objects. On the left wall, a heroically scaled portrait of Samuel Colt, painted in 1865 by Charles Loring Elliott, depicts the tycoon with a gold and silver Siamese vase that is housed in a Plexiglas case nearby. Americaâs ambassador to the world received many such glittering gifts from foreign potentates.
âItâs the most famous Colt in existence,â Mr Houze says of his favorite object, an engraved, ivory-handled Number 5 pistol of 1840 that belonged to Colonel Colt himself. There is no telling what the weapon would bring on the open market. In 2003, Greg Martin Auctions of San Francisco sold a cased 1849 Colt revolver engraved by Gustave Young for $828,800, an auction record for an American gun.
An inspiration in his own time, Samuel Colt was the prototype for titans to come. Reflects Mr Houze: âHe championed the concept of modernism long before the word was coined, he pioneered the use of celebrity endorsements to promote his products, he introduced the adjective ânew and improvedâ to advertising and he demonstrated the commercial value of brand-name recognition.â
Concludes Ms Kornhauser: âThere is no better example of the alliance of art and commerce in mid-19th Century America than the partnership of these two entrepreneurial showmen, Colt and Catlin.â
Funding a show on weapons, even historic ones, proved challenging for the Wadsworth Atheneum, which postponed the exhibition by four months before opening it in September. In the end, benefactors Melinda and Paul Sullivan stepped forward to make âSamuel Coltâ possible, supplementing gifts from other sources.
Published by Yale University Press in conjunction with the Wadsworth Atheneum Museum of Art, Samuel Colt: Arms, Art and Invention is available for $65 hardcover, $45 softcover.
Following its close in Hartford, the show travels to the Durham Western Heritage Museum in Omaha, the National Cowboy and Western Heritage Museum in Oklahoma City, the Northwest Museum of Arts & Culture in Spokane, Wash., and the Panhandle-Plains Historical Museum in Canyon, Texas.
The Wadsworth Atheneum is at 600 Main Street. For information, call 860-278-2670 or visit WadsworthAtheneum.org.
Laura Beach is the senior contributing editor for Antiques and The Arts Weekly, also published by Bee Publishing Co., Inc., in which this feature originally appeared.