Thursday, June 21, 2012

Jerome Thompson

Jerome Thompson (1814-1886) was a popular 19th century American genre and landscape painter. Here is more about his life and career.

 American Beauties (1867)

 Autumn (ca. 1860)

 Gathering Wildflowers (1859)

 Indian Idyll (1865)

 Noonday in Summer (1852)

 Pastoral (1872)

 Recreation (1857)

 The Belated Party on Mansfield Mountain (1858)

The Open Gate (also known as Flirtation) (1875)

Wednesday, June 20, 2012

The American Revolution

Here are some 19th century paintings depicting the American Revolution.

 Alfred Wordsworth Thompson: Halt at the Outpost (1881)

 Archibald Willard: The Spirit of '76 (1876)

 Frank Blackwell Mayer: The Continentals (1875)

 Franz Ludwig Catel: Molly Pitcher at The Battle of Monmouth, 1778
[who was Molly Pitcher? find out here]

 Howard Pyle: Redcoat Soldiers Toasting the Ladies

 Howard Pyle: The Nation Makers

 Jennie Brownscombe: Washington Greeting Lafayette at Mount Vernon

 William Tylee Ranney: First News of the Battle of Lexington (1847)

William Tylee Ranney: Recruiting for the Continental Army (1857-59)

Tuesday, June 19, 2012

Civil War

The Civil War was arguably the most important event in American history after the Revolution itself. Its effects - and wounds - reverberate in American society to this day. Here are a few paintings depicting the Civil War.

 George Cochran Lambdin: At the Front (1866)

 George W. Pettit: Union Refugees (1865)

 Gilbert Gaul: Glorious Fighting (1885)

 Gilbert Gaul: Holding the Line at All Costs (1882)

 Gilbert Gaul: Leaving Home (ca. 1907)

 James Alexander Walker: View of the Grand Army of the Republic (1865)

Here is a group of paintings by James Hope, who was in the Union army at the Battle of Antietam, which he portrayed in these searing images. The Battle of Antietam (known to southerners as the Battle of Sharpsburg) was the bloodiest single day of any American war. Both I and a friend have family history connected with this battle: we had ancestors who owned neighboring farms on which the battle was fought. My friend tells me this story that has come down through oral history: after the battle, their family had to move away because the ground was so saturated with blood that it was impossible to farm there anymore. One of the best accounts of this battle (worth reading if you have any interest in the Civil War at all) is Landscape Turned Red by Stephen W. Sears.

 James Hope: A Crucial Delay

 James Hope: A Fateful Turn

James Hope: Artillery Hell

James Hope: Wasted Gallantry

James Hope: The Aftermath at Bloody Lane, 1862

Monday, June 18, 2012

George Caleb Bingham

George Caleb Bingham (1811-1879) was an American artist who depicted frontier life. Although not technically as skilled as many other American painters, Bingham's work remains a valuable documentation of American history as well as being perfectly suited to its subjects. His was a truly American (as opposed to Euro-American) art. The question remains as to whether Bingham's paintings were true-to-life reportage of the American frontier, or whether they were mythologized depictions.

More internet resources on Bingham are here, here, and here.

Captured by Indians (1848)

 Daniel Boone Escorting Settlers through Cumberland Gap (1851-52)
[more about this painting] [still more (scroll down to "Figure 9")]

 Family Life on the Frontier (1845)

 Fishing on the Mississippi (1851-52)

 Jolly Flatboatmen in Port (1857)

 Martial Law (or General Order No. 11) (1868)
[what was General Order No. 11? find out here]

Raftsmen Playing Cards (1847)

 Stump Speaking (1853-54)

 The County Election (1852)

 The Dull Story (1843)

 The Squatters (1850)

 The Verdict of the People (1854-55)

Washington Crossing the Delaware (1856-71)

It's interesting to compare Bingham's depiction of Washingon crossing the Delaware with Emanuel Gottlieb Leutze's more famous (and dramatic) version.

Friday, June 15, 2012

Edward Lamson Henry, ctd

Here is the final set of paintings by E.L. Henry.

 The Old Dutch Church, Bruynswick (1878)

 The Pillory and Whipping Post, New Castle, Delaware (1896)

 The Sitting Room (1883)

 The Sunny Hours of Childhood (1879)

 The Village Street (1892)

 Village Square (1870)

 Village Squire Entertaining the New Minister

Waiting for the Ferry (1906)