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The Story
Exhibitions Current Upcoming Past |
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| WHITE GREEN AND GOLD: The
Seasons in American Landscape Painting January 17, 2004 through June 13, 2004 Krieble Gallery ![]() ![]() ![]() The Members' Opening for White, Green, and Gold and A Corner in an Etcher's Studio was a huge success. Members were welcomed by Hartford Steam Boiler Inspection and Insurance Company President and CEO Richard Booth (seen here with his wife Barbara) and then got a first glimpse of the new exhibitions.Would
you like to become a member?
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![]() Thomas Cole, Study for A Wild Scene, 1831 |
![]() Fidelia Bridges, Wild Roses Among Rye, 1874 |
SUMMER
Shall I compare thee to a summers
day?
William Shakespeare (1564-1616)
The temperate climate and long bright days of summer afford it a special
place in our minds. Today, New Englanders associate summer with farmers
markets and lazy days spent in the garden or by the sea. This was not
always so. Prior to the Industrial Revolution, summer was seen in terms
of agricultural production. The long days and warmer weather were suitable
for fieldwork. This aspect of summer is represented in Edward Volkerts
Harrowing, which depicts a farmer and his oxen toiling on the land. William
Wheelers Still Life with Watermelon reflects the bounty of
the season.
In the late 19th century, summer resorts flourished in the northeast.
Some were along the coastline, while others were in the mountains. All
offered relief from the hustle and bustle of the modern world for a growing
leisure class. Some of the most fashionable summer resorts were discovered
first by artists and were once artist colonies. John Ferguson Weirs Beach at Easthampton represents the picturesque Long Island beach
on the verge of becoming a summer resort.
![]() William Wheeler , Still Life with Watermelon, 1865 |
![]() John Ferguson Weir , Beach at Easthampton, c. 1875 |
FALL
It is at the season of the fading
leaf that nature utters her loudest warning.
Edward Hitchcock (1793-1864)
Leaf peeping, or enjoying the fall colors, is a quintessential New England
experience. In the early to mid-19th century, Hudson River School painters
considered the vibrant colors of the seasons as a landscape feature that
set the United States apart from Europe.
In the later 19th century, Tonalist painters who were attracted to transitional
times of day and year (dawn and dusk; spring and autumn) focused on visible
signs such as the turning of the leaves from green to gold. Impressionist
artists at the start of the 20th century reveled in the seasons
opportunities to explore light and color.
![]() Ernest Albert, Autumnn Day, Connecticut, n.d. |
![]() Alvin Fisher , In the Nick of Time, 1848 |
WINTER
Unwarmed by any sunset light,
the grey day darkened into night
John Greenleaf Whittier, 1866
With few exceptions, winter was not painted in the United States prior
to the mid-19th century. Instead, it was a topic reserved for literature.
New England writers, such as John Greenleaf Whittier, judged their ability
to survive the winter as indicative of their moral and physical superiority
over their southern counterparts. Still, artists largely ignored winter
until the 1850s.
In 1851, Emmanuel Leutze painted George Washington Crossing the Delaware (Metropolitan Museum of Art), imbuing the historic crossing of the ice-choked
river with sentiments of fortitude and endurance. Within the same decade,
George Durrie completed quaint playful winter scenes, such as Seven Miles
to Farmington that were popularized through Currier and Ives prints. Only
then did winter constitute a viable subject matter for artists. Gradually,
the Netherlandish style that Durrie employed was replaced by Tonalist
and then Impressionist views of the landscape, largely without figures.
The Impressionists rigorously studied the effect snow had on a landscape
and the effect of light on snow. Ironically, while perceptions and images
of winter have changed over the course of time, snow has always been considered
emblematic of purity and virtue.
![]() Childe Hassam , Across the Common on a Winter Evening, c. 1885-86 |
![]() Bruce Crane , Snow Scene in Winter, c.1890 |












