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George Inness: An American Landscape Painter, 1825-1894

DATES April 06, 1946 through May 12, 1946
ORGANIZING DEPARTMENT American Art
COLLECTIONS American Art
There are currently no digitized images of this exhibition. If images are needed, contact archives.research@brooklynmuseum.org.
  • April 6, 1946 A retrospective exhibition of paintings by Inness, covering all stages of his career from its beginning about 1846 to the artist’s death in 1894, will be opened to the public in Museum’s Entrance Gallery on April 6, and will remain on view through May 12.

    The exhibition has been organized by Mrs. Cordelia Sargent Pond and Miss Elizabeth McCausland in commemoration of the 50th anniversary of the George Walter Vincent Smith Art Museum at Springfield, Massachusetts, where it was shown in February and March.

    Miss McCausland states: “George Inness bridged the golden day of Mount and the brown decades of Eakins spanning Jacksonian democracy and post-Civil War industrial expansion. One of the most authentic of nineteenth century American artists, he is also one of the least appreciated. While Hudson River and Rocky Mountain painters flaunted flamboyant panoramas and Church apotheosized the Andes, Inness cultivated his acre of mensurable Hackensack and Medfield meadows, of moderate New England harvests, of half-light mists seen from a Montclair studio window.

    PRESS PREVIEW: April 4th from 10 A.M. to 4:30 P.M.


    Brooklyn Museum Archives. Records of the Department of Public Information. Press releases, 1942 - 1946. 04-06/1946, 038.
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