Reception room cabinet,
Gustave Herter, New York City, circa 1860. Bird's eye maple,
rosewood, ebony and marquetry. From the collection of the
Victoria Society of Maine, Morse-Libby Mansion, Portland,
Me.
Art and the
Empire City: New York, 1825 to 1861
NEW YORK CITY - By the second quarter of the Nineteenth Century,
New York City, already the nation's financial center, was poised
to become a "world city" on a par with London and Paris. With the
opening of the Erie Canal in 1825, which linked the Great Lakes
and the Atlantic Ocean via the Hudson River, the great port of
New York became the gateway to the West, assuring the city's
commercial preeminence. Over the next 35 years, until the start
of the Civil War in 1861, New York grew rapidly, becoming the
"Empire City" - the largest city in the Western Hemisphere, and
the nation's center of manufacturing, culture, and the arts.
The Metropolitan Museum of Art recently opened the landmark
exhibition "Art and the Empire City: New York, 1825-1861," which
explores the visual arts in America during this time and
chronicles New York's ascendancy to the position of the nation's
primary art center and its capital of culture, a role it has
claimed ever since. The presentation features some 310 works from
84 lenders in the United States and Europe.
"Through the hundreds of works that were brought together for
this unprecedented exhibition, New Yorkers, as well as our
visitors from around the world, will experience the moment when
New York City began to perceive itself as the center of culture
in America. Indeed, the city we know today, the vibrant capital
of art, architecture, design, and fashion, finds its roots in
this period," commented Philippe de Montebello, director of the
Metropolitan Museum.
"Art and the Empire City" is organized thematically within a
chronological framework, beginning with works that characterize
New York's status in 1825 as a small city, poised to move into a
position of greater prominence. Moving through the galleries,
visitors see how economic, historical, technological,
demographic, and cultural forces coalesced, transforming New York
into a major world city.
"Marquis de Lafayette," Samuel F. B. Morse, 1825-26. Oil on
canvas from the collection of the City of New York.
The first gallery begins in the year 1825, when New York City
celebrated the completion of the Erie Canal and its artists
conceived of the National Academy of Design, one of the nation's
first fine arts institutions. Visitors entering the exhibition
encounter the imposing 1826 full-length portrait of the Marquis
de Lafayette by Samuel F.B. Morse, on loan from New York's City
Hall.
The Rise of a Great City (1825-35)
Lafayette was much beloved in America for his role in the
Revolutionary War. When he returned to the United States in 1824
for a lengthy national tour and to witness the opening of the
Erie Canal, all of the major artists in New York vied for the
opportunity to paint his portrait - the most important commission
of the decade. It is significant that Morse, future master of
photography and inventor of the telegraph and a founder and the
first president of the National Academy of Design, as well as a
champion of the movement to foster the arts in America, was
awarded the commission.
Flanking Lafayette's portrait is a pair of monumental silver
presentation vases from the Metropolitan's own collection,
crafted in 1824-25 by Thomas Fletcher and Sidney Gardiner. A gift
of thanks to Governor De Witt Clinton from the merchants of Pearl
Street for his role in envisioning and overseeing the building of
the Erie Canal, these elaborate covered vases are embellished
with scenes of the canal's construction.
In 1825, New York was still dependent on Philadelphia for
silversmiths capable of such a high level of craftsmanship, but
that would soon change, as a presentation coffee urn (The Detroit
Institute of Arts) in the same gallery, made by Gale and Moseley
of New York in 1829, makes evident.
The nascent American school of landscape painting is represented
by "View of the Round-Top in the Catskill Mountains," a
breathtaking vista over the Hudson River painted by Thomas Cole
around 1827, on loan from the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston.
Hand-colored engravings, aquatints, and lithographs depict New
York as it was then - concentrated in lower Manhattan below 14th
Street. (The renowned diarist and former mayor of New York Philip
Hone was one of the first to use the term "downtown," which was
coined in this period.)
Other highlights in the gallery include works from the
Metropolitan's collection, such as William J. Bennett's engraving
"Fulton Street and Market" (1828-30), a streetscape still
recognizable today, and the large-scale tripartite "New York
Harbor from the Battery" (1829) by Thomas Thompson, a landmark in
the history of American lithography. Thomas Horner's early
depiction of "Broadway at Canal Street" (1836), a hand-colored
aquatint and etching, shows the city's main street bustling with
merchants, carriages, carts, and shoppers.
Portrait Gallery
During the 1820s and 1830s, before Thomas Cole's investigations
of the American landscape became influential, portraiture
dominated American painting and sculpture. The exhibition's
second gallery recreates a Nineteenth Century portrait gallery,
recalling the famous Governors' Room (then the actual New York
City office of the state's governors) in City Hall as it looked
around 1825. The gallery presents painted portraits and marble
busts of some of New York's most distinguished artists, writers,
and cultural leaders by New York's most accomplished artists.
The Yale University Art gallery has lent a commanding marble bust
of the painter John Trumbull by Robert Ball Hughes (modeled 1833;
carved 1834-after 1840), while Trumbull's own work is represented
in the gallery by his 1792 full-length portrait of Alexander
Hamilton (Donaldson, Lufkin & Jenrette Collection of
Americana), a figure revered by New Yorkers.
Other prominent figures, such as De Witt Clinton; Andrew Jackson,
who was President of the United States from 1829 to 1837; the
poet and newspaper editor William Cullen Bryant; the painters
Cole and Asher B. Durand; and the author Washington Irving are
among the New York luminaries rendered by painters such as Durand
and Morse and sculptors such as Hiram Powers and John Frazee.
Neo-classical Architecture
Many of New York's great public buildings of the era (most no
longer extant), as well as both typical and visionary housing
projects, were executed in the Grecian style. Architectural
drawings of great clarity and beauty illustrate the style that
dominated the period between 1825 and 1840, and are on view in
the third gallery. In addition to original presentation drawings,
the gallery includes selections from the masterpiece of early
lithography "Views of the Public Buildings in the City of New
York Correctly Drawn on Stone by A.J. Davis" (1827), printed by
Anthony Imbert.
Two of the works depicted here - the Rotunda, a building in City
Hall Park constructed in 1818-20 to house John Vanderlyn's grand
panorama of the gardens and the palace at Versailles, and the
façade of the Branch Bank of the United States - are of
particular interest because both the panorama and the façade can
be seen on permanent display in the Metropolitan Museum's
American Wing.
Decorative Arts, 1830-45
The fourth gallery features interior furnishings that might have
been found in Grecian-style houses and decorative arts in various
media dating from around 1830 to around 1845. The Brooklyn Museum
of Art has lent a pair of pilasters and a mahogany door with a
pedimented frame from Clarkson Lawn, a grand Grecian house built
in Brooklyn in the mid-1830s.
Joseph Meeks and Sons, one of the most prolific New York
cabinetmaking firms of the period, is represented by a bold
mahogany-veneered pier table (circa 1835; private collection)
with curvilinear supports, and also by a hand-colored broadside,
a rare lithograph of enormous importance to the history of
American furniture, which shows the firm's product line in 1833.
Among the objects in silver, Baldwin Gardiner's covered tureen on
a stand (circa 1830; private collection) and a delicate basket by
Marquand and Company (1833-38; The Baltimore Museum of Art), both
made in New York, bear eloquent testimony to the high level of
craftsmanship and design by then available in New York. An
exquisite pair of Argand lamps (circa 1835; Dallas Museum of
Art), probably manufactured in England, bear the mark of the New
York retailer J. and I. Cox, a purveyor to the American market of
lighting fixtures and other domestic and imported goods.
A rosewood armchair, couch, and six nested tables (all from
private collections) were part of a large order of furniture by
Duncan Phyfe that was filled in New York in 1840-41 for use at
Millford Plantation in South Carolina. These works exemplify the
appreciation in other parts of the country for New York style.
Refined earthenware such as a large pitcher embellished with
thistles (circa 1835-50, The Metropolitan Museum of Art) that was
produced in Jersey City by the American Pottery Company are
remarkable for the crisply molded patterns.
New York Artists and Authors
The interrelationship between the visual arts and literature is
explored in the fifth gallery, which includes such masterworks as
Thomas Cole's 1827 oil painting "Last of the Mohicans" (Wadsworth
Atheneum), inspired by the eponymous James Fenimore Cooper novel,
and Asher B. Durand's 1849 iconic painting "Kindred Spirits" (The
New York Public Library), a tribute to both artist Thomas Cole
(who had died in 1848) and poet William Cullen Bryant. Marble
busts of Cole and Bryant, both by Henry Kirke Brown, flank the
painting. Robert Weir's circa 1837 depiction of St Nicholas (The
New-York Historical Society) attests to the development of
Christmas as a national celebration during this period.
Connoisseurship and Collecting In New York
A measure of New York's increasing cultural sophistication was
reflected in the high quality of foreign works of art on view in
public exhibitions or acquired by New Yorkers for their personal
collections. The sixth gallery presents unprecedented
documentation of the evolution of American taste in foreign works
of art, beginning in the 1830s with an interest in such Old
Master paintings as "A Grand Landscape (An Extensive Landscape
with a Ruined Castle and a Village Church)" by Jacob van Ruisdael
(1665-70, The National Gallery, London), which was first
displayed in New York in 1830.
Over time, New Yorkers developed an appreciation for works by
contemporary European artists, such as Rosa Bonheur's 1851-53
"The Horse Fair," which is in the Metropolitan's permanent
collection.
Works ranging from Bartolomé Esteban Murillo's painting "Four
Figures on a Step" (circa 1655, The Kimbell Art Museum) to Danish
sculptor Bertel Thorvaldsen's "Ganymede and the Eagle" (1817-29,
The Minneapolis Institute of Arts), to J.W.M. Turner's renowned
"Staffa, Fingal's Cave" (1832, Yale Center for British Art)
illustrate the quality and diversity of art works seen in New
York before the Civil War.
Works owned by private collectors of the time, such as the 1449
"Triumph of Fame" (birth tray of Lorenzo de Medici) by Giovanni
di Ser Giovanni, called Scheggia (originally in the renowned
collection of Thomas J. Bryan, and now in the Metropolitan), as
well as engravings after Old Masters (such as Rembrandt and
Rubens) and contemporary works (by Paul Delaroche and David
Wilkie) are among the other works on display in this gallery.
Crystal Palace, 1853
New York's presence on the international stage of world culture
was heralded by the 1835 "New-York Exhibition of the Industry of
All Nations," the focus of another gallery. The exhibition, also
known as "The New York Crystal Palace," was housed in a grand
building of cast-iron and glass. Both the structure and the
exhibition itself were modeled on and intended to rival London's
Great Exhibition of 1851 (the first world's fair).
The 1853 exposition is explored through American works that were
displayed there, including the iconic "Greek Slave" (1847) by
Hiram Powers, now in the collection of the Newark Museum; a rare
suite of rosewood seating furniture in the Louis XIV style by
Julius Dessoir, a gift in honor of the museum's 125th anniversary
in 1995, seen here for the first time; and a recently
rediscovered Gothic-style carved oak bookcase (The Nelson-Atkins
Museum of Art) made by Gustave Herter, who was to become
American's premier cabinetmaker and decorator by the end of the
Civil War.
Photography, the New Medium
In counterpoint to the portrait gallery at the beginning of the
exhibition, the eighth gallery presents early New York
daguerreotypes and salted paper prints. Photography, which was
introduced to America by Samuel F.B. Morse soon after its
invention in France in 1839, made portraiture available to an
ever-widening audience, which ranged from illustrious Americans
such as Walt Whitman and P.T. Barnum (their daguerreotype
portraits are on view) to common folk such as a fireman with his
hat and horn and a grocery boy with his parcel.
Almost instantaneously Americans embraced the new medium, with
the result that soon there were more practicing daguerreotypists
in New York City than in all of Europe. The exhibition includes
works by well-known pioneers in the field, such as Mathew B.
Brady, and lesser-known artists - Gabriel Harrison and Jeremiah
Gurney among them - whose contributions to this art form only now
are being brought to public attention.
The Great Emporium
By the 1850s, New York boasted a dazzling array of high-quality
wares, both produced locally and imported from abroad, which
attracted people from all over the country. For those who came to
shop, Broadway was the heart of "the Great Emporium." Works on
view in this gallery suggest the panoply of luxury goods
available in New York at mid-century.
Among the highlights of this gallery are a richly carved statuary
mantelpiece depicting Paul and Virginia (characters from a
popular French novel), commissioned by Hamilton Fish of New York
(1851, Museum of the City of New York); brightly colored
wallpapers; and gleaming silver, such as the covered urn (1845,
Henry Clay Memorial Foundation) presented to Henry Clay by the
gold and silver artisans of New York in thanks for the protective
tariff of 1842, and a silver tray, pitcher, and two goblets
(1856) presented by Temple Emanu-El to the Reverend Dr D. Einhorn
(Congregational Emanu-El, New York).
Thanks to the artistic virtuosity of New York's large and skilled
immigrant population, the decorative arts flourished in the
Empire City. For example, the production of cut and engraved
glass reached an impressive level of expertise, as demonstrated
by a spectacular compote made for President and Mrs Abraham
Lincoln at the Long Island Flint Glass Works of Christian
Dorflinger of Brooklyn, N.Y. (1861; The Metropolitan Museum of
Art).
High-style furnishings include works by two of the greatest
cabinetmakers working in the city in the 1850s: a resplendent
carved rosewood sofa by J.H. Belter (circa 1855, Milwaukee Art
Museum), and an elaborately carved rosewood étagère by Alexander
Roux (circa 1855, The Metropolitan Museum of Art).
Other highlights of this gallery include a small tabletop
bookcase made in 1851 (Museum of the City of New York) by Thomas
Brooks of Brooklyn as a gift from the firemen of New York to the
renowned soprano Jenny Lind ("The Swedish Nightingale"), whose
nationwide tour was organized by the impresario P.T. Barnum, and
a magnificent figured maple and rosewood reception room cabinet
made circa 1860 by Gustave Herter (Victoria Mansion, Morse-Libby
House, Portland, Me.).
Two ball gowns that were worn to the Prince of Wales Ball held in
New York during his visit in 1860, both on loan from the Museum
of the City of New York, are also on view. A display of period
jewelry documented as having been made in New York includes the
1861 seed-pearl parure (necklace and a pair of bracelets)
acquired from the New York jeweler Tiffany and Co. for Mary Todd
Lincoln, who wore them to her husband's inaugural ball (Library
of Congress).
The Empire City
By mid-century, New York had assumed the status of "Empire City,"
as the tenth gallery, displaying the large-scale 1851 map of New
York City published by Matthew Dripps (Library of Congress) and
city views drawn from numerous private collections and public
archives attest. Frederick Law Olmsted's presentation boards
(Municipal Archives) depict proposals for Central Park, which was
under development at this time. Each board juxtaposes Olmsted's
"Greensward" plan of 1857 with Mathew Brady's photographs of the
existing, somewhat barren topography, and Calvert Vaux's lush oil
sketches that convey a vision of what Central Park was to become.
Architectural drawings of churches, public buildings, the Croton
Water Works, and private houses, now in a variety of styles
ranging from Gothic Revival to polychromatic Venetian, are
intermingled with rare urban views captured in the new medium of
photography, including early cityscapes owned by the J. Paul
Getty Museum, many of them seen publicly for the first time.
A stained glass window (1844-47) by William Jay Bolton and John
Bolton (St Ann and the Holy Trinity Church, Brooklyn) represents
the first major program of stained glass made in America; it
complements "Miriam and Jubal," the monumental organ window from
the same church, which is on permanent view in the Metropolitan
Museum's American Wing.
The Triumph of American Artists
By the mid-1840s, American painting and sculpture had come into
their own, and New York City was the center of the American art
scene. In the eleventh gallery, titled "The Triumph of American
Artists," each of America's major artists is represented by a
signature work known to have been exhibited in New York City or
owned by a New York collector during the period.
"Walt Whitman," daguerreotype attributed to Gabriel Harrison,
1850s. From the collection of the New York Public Library.
Among these diverse masterpieces is "Fur Traders Descending the
Missouri" (1845, The Metropolitan Museum of Art), painted for the
New York market by the Missouri artist George Caleb Bingham;
William Sidney Mount's "Eel Spearing at Setauket" (1845, New York
State Historical Association); "New York Harbor" by Fitz Hugh
Lane (1850, Museum of Fine Arts, Boston); and Eastman Johnson's
"Negro Life at the South" (1859, The New-York Historical Society,
on permanent loan from The New York Public Library).
Sculpture ranging from Chauncey Bradley Ives' Neo-classical
marble of "Ruth" (modeled 1849 and carved 1851 or later, Chrysler
Museum of Art) to the painted plaster "Slave Auction" by John
Rogers (1859, The New-York Historical Society), to the cast
bronze "Indian Hunter" by John Quincy Adams Ward (modeled
1857-60, The Metropolitan Museum of Art) are among the other
works in the gallery.
The Heart of the Andes
The exhibition culminates in the dramatic display of Frederic
Edwin Church's monumental painting "The Heart of the Andes"
(1859). This masterpiece from the Metropolitan's collection, an
idealized depiction of an exotic South American vista, is the
sole work of art on view in the final gallery, presented as it
was originally - as a single picture in a darkened room. The
painting is displayed in a reconstruction of the original,
elaborate, freestanding frame of dark wood that the artist
designed for it, intending to create the effect of looking
through a casement window onto an actual landscape.
During its 1859 single-picture debut in New York, the painting
was seen by no fewer than 12,000 viewers. Subsequently it was
shown to great acclaim in London, after which it was returned to
the United States and then toured the country until 1861. In
addition, this remarkable painting was one of the works exhibited
at the Sanitary Fair of 1864, an event organized to raise funds
for the war wounded, and which inspired the citizens of New York
to call for a city museum. Although the Civil War intervened, in
1870 Frederic Church helped to found that museum, the
Metropolitan Museum of Art.
The exhibition is accompanied by a fully illustrated scholarly
catalogue, which is available in both softcover and hardbound
editions in the museum's bookshops. The publication, published by
the Metropolitan Museum and distributed by Yale University Press,
features previously unpublished material on the complex story of
American art in the second quarter of the Nineteenth Century,
discussed in 13 essays.
Contributors include, from the Metropolitan Museum of Art: John
K. Howat, the Lawrence A. Fleischman Chairman, departments of
American art; from the department of American decorative arts,
Morrison H. Heckscher, the Anthony W. and Lulu C. Wang Curator;
Alice Cooney Frelinghuysen, curator; Amelia Peck, associate
curator; and Catherine Hoover Voorsanger, associate curator; from
the department of American paintings and sculpture, Carrie Rebora
Barratt, associate curator and manager, The Henry R. Luce Center
for the Study of American Art; Kevin J. Avery, associate curator;
Thayer Tolles, associate curator; and Elliot Bostwick Davis,
assistant curator; and from the department of photographs, Jeff
L. Rosenheim, assistant curator.
Other contributors include Caroline Rennolds Milbank, fashion
historian; Dell Upton, professor of architectural history,
University of California, Berkeley; and Deborah Dependahl Waters,
curator of decorative arts and manuscripts, Museum of the City of
New York.
The exhibition is organized by John K. Howat and by Catherine
Hoover Voorsanger, who is project director for the exhibition and
catalogue. The exhibition is made possible by Fleet. The
exhibition catalogue is made possible through the support of the
William Cullen Bryant Fellows.
A related exhibition, "Intimate Friends: Thomas Cole, Asher
Durand, and William Cullen Bryant," will be on view concurrently
at The New-York Historical Society (October 17 to February 4,
2001).
The Metropolitan Museum is at 1000 Fifth Avenue. For
information, 212/535-7710.