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Kindred Spirits: Asher B. Durand and the American Landscape

DATES March 30, 2007 through July 29, 2007
ORGANIZING DEPARTMENT American Art
COLLECTIONS American Art
RELATED LINKS Main Exhibition Page
  • Kindred Spirits: Asher B. Durand and the American Landscape
    Asher B. Durand (1796 –1886), one of the most important American artists of the nineteenth century, was a central figure in the New York art world and the acknowledged leader of the American landscape school from the mid-1840s until his death at the age of ninety forty years later. Durand’s career spanned six decades, from the earliest efforts of American artists and writers to construct a national cultural identity by means of American scenery, on through the mid-century triumph and subsequent eclipse of what is now known as the Hudson River School of landscape painting. Although the native landscape school was overshadowed by new French-inspired styles after the Civil War, Durand was revered by later generations as an elder statesman of American art. Today his contributions are recognized as central to the development of nineteenth-century American landscape painting. He created some of the finest expressions of the American pastoral mode, he introduced the vertical forest interior as an expressive pictorial format, and he remains closely identified with the progressive practice of plein air (outdoor) painting.

    Born on a farm in what is now Maplewood, New Jersey, Durand settled in Greenwich Village in New York as a young man in 1817. He distinguished himself first as a master engraver of banknotes and reproductions of works of ar t and then as a por trait painter. He also worked as a painter of rural genre (idealized images of everyday life) and literary narrative, finally yielding during the mid-1830s to his longtime desire to focus on landscape subjects. A year’s sojourn in Europe, from 1840 to 1841, completed his artistic education; after his return home, he fully embraced the landscape practice for which he is best known today.

    Having served in 1826 as one of the founders of the National Academy of Design, the leading artists’ organization of nineteenth-century America, Durand was elected president of that institution in 1845 and held the office until 1861. With the death of his rival and mentor Thomas Cole in 1848, Durand’s stature rose even further as he inherited the role of America’s most prominent landscape painter. In 1855 he articulated his views on plein air painting in the famous “Letters on Landscape Painting,” which have proved a rich resource for artists of the time and generations of critics and art historians. Durand retired to the family property in Maplewood in 1869 and continued to paint until the late 1870s. He is buried at Green-Wood Cemetery in Brooklyn.

    Linda S. Ferber
    Guest Curator and Curator Emerita, Brooklyn Museum
  • There is yet another motive for referring you to the study of Nature early—its influence on the mind and heart. The external appearance of this our dwelling-place . . . is fraught with lessons of high and holy meaning, only surpassed by the light of Revelation.

    —Durand, “Letters on Landscape Painting”

    Durand’s decision to become a landscape painter not only offered professional promise but also answered a personal need to leave the studio for the great outdoors. From the 1840s to the 1870s, Durand spent several months annually on sketching and painting expeditions that ranged from New York to New England. He was usually accompanied by fellow artists and family members. His lively letters from the field to family and friends testify that these communal expeditions were as important to his physical and spiritual health as they were to his creative process.

    Although Durand was not unique in his plein air practice, the Studies from Nature have long been perceived as a special contribution within the scope of his oeuvre. Many of these paintings, generally small and unsigned, remained in the artist’s studio until his death. A number of them can be linked to the exhibition pictures in this installation.
  • You need not a period of pupilage in an artist’s studio to learn to paint. . . . [L]et me earnestly recommend to you one STUDIO which you may freely enter, and receive in liberal measure the most sure and safe instruction ever meted to any pupil . . . —the STUDIO of Nature.

    —Durand, “Letters on Landscape Painting”

    Durand’s Studies from Nature, as they were collectively known, are the visual records of the artist’s keen observations about nature, light, and atmosphere gleaned from many seasons of painting outdoors. Although these field studies were primarily intended for studio use, Durand’s plein air oil paintings were also recognized by artists and critics in his day as having aesthetic as well as utilitarian value.

    Durand published his reflections on plein air practice as his “Letters on Landscape Painting,” a series of nine essays that appeared in 1855 in the Crayon, a journal founded and coedited by his son, John, a critic, and the landscape painter and critic William James Stillman. Offering practical advice for the aspiring landscape painter, the “Letters” expound on Durand’s own practice and beliefs, which were shared by many of his contemporaries.
  • Durand's Portrait, Genre, and Figure Paintings
    Early in his career, Durand harbored the ambition to switch from the engraver’s trade to the more creative and prestigious realm of the painter. His intense study of other artists’ portrait, genre, and landscape paintings during the process of reproducing their works as engravings provided models that served him well. He made a careful copy in oil of Ariadne, John Vanderlyn’s Neoclassical nude of 1812, as he prepared to engrave that famous painting. By the early 1830s his abilities as both engraver and painter were widely recognized. Durand received commissions to paint portraits of prominent figures specifically so that he might also make engravings after his canvases. In 1835 he embarked on his most important portrait commission, a record of the nation’s seven presidents. During the 1830s Durand also worked on a series of genre paintings, narrative works that sought to define a national culture by drawing inspiration from American writers and by portraying “American” social and ethnic types.
  • Durand as a Landscape Painter
    The outdoor settings for some of Durand’s portraits and genre subjects of the 1830s demonstrate his interest in landscape, which became his major focus after returning from Europe in 1841. Durand’s range and pictorial inventiveness as a landscape painter are striking. He moved easily among established landscape vocabularies, producing splendid wilderness images, historical landscapes, and grand allegories. The pastoral landscape was, perhaps, Durand’s signature subject. These images of a cultivated landscape, populated with yeomen, domestic animals, neat houses, and white steeples, represented an ideal of national, political, and cultural unity in times of increasing sectional tension. The pastoral also served a private therapeutic purpose, since Durand believed that contemplating harmonious nature, actual or painted, could restore spiritual as well as physical health.

    The artist was an early practitioner and a major advocate of outdoor painting in America, and he is still celebrated for his modestly scaled but powerful plein air paintings that record years of experience in the sketching grounds of the American landscape school. These works served as studies for the foreground vegetation and trees in his pastoral landscapes, as well as for a long series of vertical American forest interiors, a format that was virtually invented in the United States by Durand. Following traditional academic process, Durand used his drawn and painted plein air studies to create the final exhibition work, which was an elaborate invention, or “composition,” painted in the studio. The artist’s close study of natural objects and atmospheric effects informed the growing realism of his exhibition pictures in the 1850s.
  • Master Engraver Master Engraver and Draftsman
    Durand taught himself the rudiments of engraving as a child while watching his father work as a watchmaker and silversmith. Apprenticed in 1812 to the Newark engraver Peter Maverick (1780 –1831), Durand quickly mastered the craft, joining the firm in 1817 and managing its New York office. The two parted ways in 1820 after Durand accepted a commission from the prominent artist John Trumbull to engrave the image of his history painting The Declaration of Independence—a three-year project whose critical success launched the young engraver’s career.

    For more than a decade, Durand was the leading American practitioner of reproductive engraving. He was renowned for his ability to reduce and transform portrait, figure, and landscape paintings by other artists into compelling black-and-white images that were published as illustrations or circulated as prints. He and his brother Cyrus were also the foremost banknote engravers in the United States, setting new standards for the design and production of currency. Durand’s skills as a draftsman, honed by years of working as an engraver, provided the foundation for his fluent ability to record the landscape in hundreds of drawings and dozens of sketchbooks. From the 1840s through the 1870s, he spent several months each year on sketching and painting expeditions to locales that ranged from New York to Vermont.
  • November 7, 2006 Nearly sixty works, including some of the most beautiful and well-known American landscape paintings of the nineteenth century, are presented in Kindred Spirits: Asher B. Durand and the American Landscape at the Brooklyn Museum from March 30 through July 29, 2007, the first major retrospective in thirty-five years devoted to Durand’s career. Works from every aspect of Durand’s long career as a major engraver, portrait painter, and landscape painter will be displayed. These include the iconic Kindred Spirits (1849), and The First Harvest in the Wilderness (1855), as well as a generous selection of his famous plein air paintings, the Studies from Nature.

    Organized by the Brooklyn Museum, the exhibition will travel to the Smithsonian American Art Museum, Washington, D.C.; and the San Diego Museum of Art.

    Asher B. Durand (American, 1796-1886), the acknowledged dean of the American landscape school from his election as President of the National Academy of Design in 1845 until his death at the age of ninety, was a figure of central importance in American art. He began his career as an engraver in 1821, receiving wide acclaim in 1823 for an engraving after John Trumbull’s The Declaration of Independence and firmly establishing his reputation as the finest engraver in the United States. In the 1830s Durand ended his engraving business and entered into a short, successful period as a portrait painter.   In 1837, a sketching expedition to the Adirondacks with his close friend and mentor Thomas Cole led to Durand’s decision to concentrate on landscape painting. Durand’s annual summer trips to the Catskill, Adirondack, and White mountains yielded hundreds of drawings and oil sketches that he later incorporated into finished paintings.

    Kindred Spirits: Asher B. Durand and the American Landscape
    is organized in a chronological and thematic manner that reflects the stages of Durand’s career, with emphasis given to the landscape paintings for which he is best known today. His multifaceted six-decade career spanned the period from the earliest efforts of artists and writers to create a national cultural identity by means of scenery on through the mid-century triumph and subsequent eclipse of the Hudson River School.

    Among the highlights of the exhibition is Durand’s major work The First Harvest in the Wilderness (1855), the cornerstone of the Brooklyn Museum’s American painting collection and one of the first two works of art commissioned by the Brooklyn Institute, forerunner of the Brooklyn Museum, to inaugurate a permanent collection. Offering an insight into the status of the fine arts in the United States (and the booming city of Brooklyn) at mid-century, Durand’s landscape was imagined as a powerful allegory for the founding of the collection as a cultural oasis in Brooklyn’s wilderness. It was a fitting image to symbolize an event with both local and national significance, since Brooklyn was the only institution of its time to commission works by living artists to build a permanent collection.

    Kindred Spirits (1849), whose title is derived from a sonnet by John Keats, was commissioned by New York businessman and arts patron Jonathan Sturges as a gift for William Cullen Bryant, who had delivered the poet’s eulogy to Thomas Cole before the National Academy of Design the previous year. The painting depicts Bryant and Cole in the wilderness of the Catskill Mountains in New York and was intended not only as an homage to Cole but also as a demonstration of Durand’s position as leader of the landscape school.

    Other works on view include Thomas Cole (circa 1837), a sensitive portrayal of Cole painted at the peak of Durand’s powers as a portraitist; In the Woods (1855), a landmark painting composed from oil studies made in the Shokan region of the Catskills that was intended to evoke the primeval North American forest and represents one of Durand’s most important contributions to the American landscape vocabulary; Dover Plains, Dutchess County, New York (1848), one of Durand’s best-known images because an engraving after the work was distributed to the members of the American Art-Union; White Mountain Scenery, Franconia Notch, New Hampshire (1857), a classic panoramic view of the White Mountains of New Hampshire that was commissioned by the prominent New York collector Robert L. Stuart; and Kaaterskill Clove (1866), Durand’s final majestic treatment of this hallowed landmark, painted for the Century Association, of which he was a founder.

    Kindred Spirits: Asher B. Durand and the American Landscape is organized for the Brooklyn Museum by Dr. Linda S. Ferber, Vice President and Director of the Museum Division of the New-York Historical Society and former Andrew W. Mellon Curator and Chair of American Art at the Brooklyn Museum.

    A full-color catalogue published by the Brooklyn Museum in association with D. Giles, Ltd., will accompany the exhibition with essays contributed by Dr. Ferber; Dr. Barbara Dayer Gallati, Curator Emerita of American Art, Brooklyn Museum; and Kenneth T. Jackson, Jacques Barzun Professor of History at Columbia University.

    This exhibition is made possible by The Henry Luce Foundation. An endowment established at the Museum by the Iris and B. Gerald Cantor Foundation and the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation helped support the publication.

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