HEADS & CUTS AT BOTTOM OF RELEASE
HEADS & CUTS AT BOTTOM OF RELEASE
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Durand cover
Kindred Spirits At Smithsonian
9-21
By Stephen May
WASHINGTON, D.C. â An influential figure in American art from his early work as the countryâs best engraver through his leadership of the Hudson River School of painting until his death at age 90, Asher B. Durand (1796â1886) was both an intellectual and visual force. The acknowledged dean of American landscapists, his poetic forest interiors and sweeping pastoral scenes and his work as president of the National Academy of Design helped set the tone for works that celebrated the relationship of Americans to nature and the wilderness.
Setting American views of the natural world apart from European traditions, Durand defined an American sensibility to the land and evolved a vertical format for depicting it. His influence hastened the decline of history painting in the mid-Nineteenth Century and the ascendancy of landscape paintings as serious works of art.
In spite of all the achievements of this urbane and technically gifted painter, his artwork and his key role in the development of American art have been overlooked in recent years. Fortunately, a full-fledged Durand revival is underway.
A spate of current exhibitions, headed by âKindred Spirits: Asher B. Durand and the American Landscape,â on view at the Smithsonian American Art Museum (SAAM) through January 8, should resurrect appreciation for his oeuvre and achievements. Organized for the Brooklyn Museum (where it opened) by Linda S. Ferber, now vice president and director of the museum division of the New-York Historical Society, this first Durand retrospective in 35 years comprises nearly 60 engravings, portraits and, most importantly, some of the most beautiful and well-known Nineteenth Century American landscape paintings.
Complementary exhibitions at the National Academy of Design, and Cedar Grove, The Thomas Cole National Historic Site, further illuminate Durandâs accomplishments.
A native of New Jersey, Durand started out as an engraver. In 1823, he won such admiration for his engraving after John Trumbullâs âThe Declaration of Independenceâ that he was considered Americaâs finest engraver. After a brief period painting portraits of prominent political and social figures, an 1837 sketching sojourn in the Adirondacks with his friend and Hudson River School leader Thomas Cole prompted Durand to focus on landscape art.
After Coleâs death in 1848, Durand became the nationâs leading landscape painter and head of the Hudson River School. He provided crucial leadership as president of the prestigious National Academy, 1845â1861.
Arguably more important than his paintings was Durandâs influence, both as an example of the dedicated artist and as a theorist, on the second generation of the Hudson River School. His nine âLetters on Landscape Painting,â printed in the periodical founded by his son John, The Crayon, in 1855, codified principles of landscape painting, stressing the use of drawings, study and geology, and the presence of God in nature. Durand revered nature, seeing in it the âvisible works of God.â His views, highly influential in their day, are significant reflections of mid-Nineteenth Century American attitudes.
Durandâs drawings and oil sketches during frequent expeditions to the Catskills, Adirondacks and White Mountains led to paintings that range from panoramic vistas to intimate forest interiors to depictions of individual trees to vignettes of hallowed landmarks like Kaaterskill Falls. He was, he said, hooked on âthe virgin charms of our native land.â
Nevertheless, he spent 1840-1841 traveling extensively in Europe, sketching from nature and copying Old Masters.
Durandâs early landscape style, derived from the example of Frenchman Claude Lorrain, featured trees as framing devices and sought to express a balance between man and nature.
Finding the natural world âfraught with lessons of high and holy meaning, only surpassed by the light of Revelation,â Durand exercised his imagination only to the extent of idealizing the real or of depicting moments of perfection in which flora, fauna and land reveal their most beautiful and typical qualities. An eternal optimist, he stressed sunlight and effulgent foliage in meticulously rendered scenes of humans and nature existing in harmony.
Durand was an early, forceful advocate of sketching outdoors. In the late 1840s, distinctions between plein air sketches for an artistâs personal use and large-scale finished landscapes for public display eroded. Influenced by the naturalistic approach to landscape and precise style advocated by Englishman John Ruskin, Durand gradually shifted to detailed, accurate views of nature, descriptive of the actual look of settings and with emphasis on mood and sentiment. Thereafter, wilderness replaced rural scenes, inviting viewers to contemplate the sublime grandeur of the natural world, as well as its beauty and tranquility. Durandâs progressive attitude, which aligned him with other proponents of realism, lends a modern sensibility to his work.
âDurand captured the sublime grandeur of the American landscape at a time when national identity was tied to depictions of these regions,â says Eleanor Jones Harvey, chief curator at SAAM. âBoth his vibrant painted sketches and his polished studio paintings embody the American search for self-knowledge and our restless exploration of the land.â
Through his paintings and writings, Durand â along with Frederic E. Church â led younger painters, especially John F. Kensett and Jasper Cropsey, away from the dramatic, moralizing passions of Cole toward a more straightforward realism and close observation of natureâs quieter moments.
In recent years Durandâs name has resurfaced, primarily as painter of âKindred Spirits,â 1849, the enduringly nostalgic image of writer William Cullen Bryant and the recently deceased Cole standing on a ledge amidst the glorious scenery of the Catskill Mountains. It is the centerpiece of the exhibition.
âKindred Spiritsâ was commissioned by New York businessman and patron Jonathan Sturges as a gift to Bryant, who had delivered a moving eulogy to Cole at the National Academy of Design in 1848.
The bonds among Bryant, Cole and Durand were close â they belonged to the same social clubs, knew the same people, traveled together, corresponded and conversed at length and bought each otherâs works. Above all, they shared a vision of nature as a moral and spiritual force. Bryant sang its praises in poetry and prose; Cole and Durand paid tribute in art.
The crisp, realistic âKindred Spiritsâ represented an idealized tribute to American nature, as well as the artistâs heartfelt homage to two leaders in launching the Hudson River School as Americaâs first major art movement. It helped establish Durandâs standing as Americaâs leading landscapist.
The painting was famously sold two years ago for $35 million by the New York Public Library to Wal-Mart heiress Alice Walton for the Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art she is building in Arkansas.
Another standout is SAAMâs âDover Plains, Dutchess County, New York,â 1848, a fine example of Durandâs pastoral work. Celebrating the bucolic, fertile American landscape, two figures bend to pick berries, suggesting harmony between man and nature. A young woman standing atop a rock gazing into the distance encourages viewers to look in wonder across the meadows and groves to the softly contoured mountains on the horizon.
âThat picture is ideal,â observed Durand, âwhose component parts are representative of the utmost perfection of nature.â Indeed, the beauty of the scene, enveloped in a divinely charged light and warm atmospheric haze, is palpable. The result of a year of painstaking sketching in Upstate New York, âDover Plainsâ was turned into an engraving and widely distributed by the American-Art Union, further promoting appreciation for the image.
The expansive scene in âDover Plains,â considered a radical compositional departure at the time, was followed by Durand paintings featuring similar vistas, including âLandscape â Composition in the Catskills,â 1848; the âHarvest in the Wilderness,â 1855, and âKaaterskill Clove,â 1866. In the latter panorama, writes Ferber in the catalog, âDurand demonstrated not only the mastery of atmospheric perspective for which he had long been justly famous but also the capacity to invent a fresh interpretation of an iconic subject on a grand scale.â
Other notable works in the exhibition include âPortrait of the Artistâs Wife and Daughter,â 1834, and a sensitive likeness of âThomas Cole,â circa 1837, painted at the peak of Durandâs work as a portrait painter.
Standouts among Durandâs intimate forest interiors, with their careful attention to accurate depictions of trees, foliage and rocks, include âBeeches,â 1945, and âIn the Woods,â 1855, a landmark canvas composed from Catskills oil studies that places the viewer at the center of a primeval forest. The latter represents one of the artistâs most significant contributions to American landscape vocabulary.
Commissioned by a prominent New York collector, âWhite Mountain Scenery, Franconia Notch, New Hampshire,â 1857, is a classic panoramic view of the White Mountains.
Also of interest are a selection of Durandâs âStudies from Nature,â vignettes depicting his favorite sketching sites, such as the Catskills and Stratton Notch, Vt.
Durand slowed down toward the end of his long life, stopping painting in 1878 and dying in 1886 in his hometown of Maplewood, N.J.
A complementary exhibition at the venerable National Academy Museum through January 6, âAsher B. Durand (1796â1886), Dean of American Landscape,â features paintings by the longtime president of the academy, as well as works by such colleagues as Albert Bierstadt, Church, George Inness and Thomas Moran, some drawn from the Berkshire Museum.
Standouts include Durand canvases running the gamut from allegorical works like his celebrated engraving of âAriadne,â 1835, âThe Morning of Lifeâ and âThe Evening of Life,â both 1840, to views of nature, such as âLandscape with Rocks and Trees,â circa 1845.
There is a stalwart marble bust of Durand by Henry Kirke Brown, dating to 1847, and a fine portrait by Durand of Lewis P. Clover. This exhibition demonstrates both Durandâs range of achievements and his influence on other artists.
Also useful is âAsher B. Durand: Intimate Observations,â on view at Cedar Grove: The Thomas Cole National Historic Site in Catskill, N.Y., through October 28.
Together, these shows, led by the âKindred Spiritsâ retrospective, document Durandâs skills as engraver, portraitist and landscape painter and remind us what a vital role he played in the development of American art.
After closing in Washington, âKindred Spiritsâ travels to the San Diego Museum of Art, February 2âApril 27.
The full-color, 256-page catalog, with essays by Ferber, art curator Barbara Dayer Gallati and art historian Kenneth T. Jackson, is co-published by the Brooklyn Museum and D Giles Limited; it is available for $55 (hardcover) and $39.95 (softcover.)
Also available is the biography, The Life and Times of Asher B. Durand, written by his son, John Durand, and first published in 1894. A paperback edition, published this year by Black Dome Press in Hensonville, N.Y., is $17.95.
The Smithsonian American Art Museum is at Eighth and F Streets NW. For information, 202-633-7970 or www.americanart.si.edu.
The National Academy of Design Museum is at 1083 Fifth Avenue, New York City. For information, 212-369-4880 or www.nationalacademy.org.
Cedar Grove: The Thomas Cole National Historic Site is at 218 Spring Street in Catskill, N.Y. For information, 518-943-7465 or www.thomascole.org.
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âKindred Spirits: Asher B. Durand And The American Landscapeâ
âKindred Spiritsâ At The Smithsonian American Art Museum
âKindred Spirits: Asher B. Durandâ
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Dover plains
In âDover Plains, Dutchess County, New York,â 1848, curator Linda S. Ferber says Durand âintegrated the foreground (and figures)â¦effectively into an expansive aerial view grounded in actual topography and climateâ¦.â Smithsonian American Art Museum (SAAM exhibition).
In the woods
According to curator Linda S. Ferber, âIn the Woods,â 1855, a quintessential forest interior painting, âarguably marked the apex of Durandâs achievementâ and was hailed as âsomething new in landscape art.â The Metropolitan Museum of Art (SAAM exhibition).
Kindred spirits
Kaaterskill Clove, a Catskills gorge long associated with Thomas Cole, formed the setting for Durandâs precisely rendered masterpiece, âKindred Spirits,â 1849. It depicts Cole, shown right, conferring on the dramatic site with fellow nature lover, writer William Cullen Bryant. Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art (SAAM exhibition).
The beeches
Durandâs âThe Beeches,â 1845, a large (60 by 48 inches) vertical landscape in which the wooded foreground frames an expansive vista of mountains and clouds, was much admired when exhibited at the National Academy of Design. The Metropolitan Museum of Art (SAAM exhibition).
Progress
Taking his cue from allegorical paintings by Thomas Cole, notably âThe Course of Empire,â Durand offered a more optimistic view of Americaâs future in âProgress (The Advance of Civilization),â 1853, which features myriad activities on land and sea near a sunlit city. Warner Collection of Gulf States Paper Corporation (SAAM exhibition).
Portrait of Durand
This daguerreotype by an unknown photographer, circa 1854, captures Durandâs intensity, alertness and keen eye at the height of his powers. New-York Historical Society Library (not in exhibition).
First harvest
In one of several of Durandâs allegories of progress, âThe First Harvest in the Wilderness,â 1855, a family has built a cabin and begun to settle on cleared forest land. Brooklyn Museum (SAAM exhibition).
Catterskill clove
In his last important view of the Catskills, âKaaterskill Clove,â 1866, Durand used an expansive format to capture the grand vista of this oft-painted site. The Century Association (SAAM exhibition).
In the catskills
In âLandscape â Composition: In the Catskills,â 1848, Durand used foreground trees to frame men, horse and dog â as well as the vista of distant mountains. San Diego Museum of Art (SAAM exhibition).
Artists wife & sister
Durand immortalized his recent marriage to Mary Frank by depicting her with her sister, Jane, seated in an idealized forest clearing with a view toward distant mountains. âPortrait of the Artistâs Wife and Her Sister,â 1834, is owned by the Newark Museum (SAAM exhibition).
Study from nature
One of a renowned series, âStudies from Nature: Rocks and Trees in the Catskills,â circa 1856, documents Durandâs attention to the precise details of rocks, foliage and trees in his oils on canvas. New-York Historical Society Museum (SAAM exhibition).
Thomas cole
Durandâs skill as a portraitist and his admiration for Thomas Cole is reflected in this noble likeness of the founder of the Hudson River School, painted around 1837 for Coleâs wife, Maria. Berkshire Museum (SAAM exhibition).
White mountain scenery
Durand made numerous preliminary studies in a region he judged âthe best for mountain scenery, in the United Statesâ in preparation for âWhite Mountain Scenery, Franconia Notch, New Hampshire,â 1857. New-York Historical Society (SAAM exhibition).
Stratton notch
From the gnarled fallen tree in the foreground across a valley to hills beyond, âStudy from Nature: Stratton Notch, Vermont,â 1853, documents Durandâs careful attention to detail in a favorite painting site. New-York Historical Society (SAAM exhibition).
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Durand was criticized for addressing the theme of the cycle of human life less successfully than Thomas Cole in âThe Morning of Lifeâ (shown here) and âThe Evening of Life,â both 1840. Such commentary helped prompt Durand to travel to Europe to improve his skills. National Academy Museum (National Academy Museum exhibition).
Durand-bust.TIF â
Henry Kirke Brownâs marble bust, âAsher Brown Durand,â 1847, emphasized the noble mien and intense gaze of the 51-year-old painter. National Academy Museum (National Academy Museum exhibition).
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