"The Life Line," Winslow
Homer.
American Art and its Critics at the National Academy of
Design
NEW YORK CITY - The first comprehensive historical examination of
American art criticism, ": American Art and its Critics" will
include some of the most powerful images in the history of
American art, along with others that received attention only in
their own time. By highlighting both the critical successes and
failures of these artistic debuts at the National Academy of
Design, the exhibit offers a balanced portrayal of the prevailing
attitudes, taste and art market that influenced the visual
culture of each period.
Dr David Dearinger, the chief curator at the National Academy of
Design, selected some of the country's most exceptional paintings
and sculpture from public and private collections nationwide.
Many of the America's foremost artists including Thomas Cole
(1801-1848), Winslow Homer (1836-1910), John Singer Sargent
(1856-1926), Augustus Saint-Gaudens (1848-1907), Thomas Eakins
(1844-1916), and John Sloan (1871-1951), among others, will be
featured in the groundbreaking exhibition.
Works of art include Thomas Cole's "Last of the Mohicans" (1827),
the first Cole to be shown in the United States, and to establish
a new standard and genre for American art. One of the most
popular works of its day, Francis Edmonds' "The City and The
Country Beaux" (1840) will demonstrate the fleeting sensibility
of taste, while Winslow Homer's first and second critically
acclaimed paintings "Prisoner's From the Front" (1866) and "The
Life Line" (1884), are both on view in order to chart the
artist's progression in relation to his growing reputation.
Reflecting the panoramic tradition popularized during the Civil
War period, the pairing of Jasper Cropsey's "The Spirit of Peace"
(1851) and "The Spirit of War" (1851) constitutes the second time
in history these works have been shown together. Other notable
couplings include the reinstallation of George Bellow's "The
Sawdust Trail" (1912) alongside Horatio Walker's crucifixion
painting "De Profundis" (1916), an ironic juxtaposition
determined by the critics to reflect a timely post-World War I
modernist view of religion.
Prior to 1826, the demand for art in the emerging nation had
focused on portraiture, which almost always required payment in
advance of its execution, thereby proving financially feasible
for the struggling artist. Once the academy began providing a
lucrative venue for the display of art, artists seemed to feel
more secure in other subject categories that did not necessarily
afford the comfort of commission. Thus rare subject categories in
America such as landscape, still life and genre began to
flourish.
By the 1840s, the Academy's Annuals were the most important
venues for the exhibition of art in the United States, and by the
1850s, the Academy's exhibition openings were among the major
events of New York's social season. It is therefore, according to
Dr Dearinger, the published critical response to these
exhibitions that has served as his organizing principle for "Rare
Reviews."
During the later 1820s and 1830s, newspapers, such as The
Evening Post and Morning Courier in New York,
The Transcript in Boston, and The
Enquirer in Philadelphia, were the most reliable
publishers of art reviews. A few weekly or monthly periodicals,
such as The New-York Mirror and The U.S.
Democratic Review and Literary Gazette, also began to print
articles on art. In almost all cases, however, art reviews were
little more than exhibition checklists.
By the 1840s, however, the situation changed in part because of
the increasing popularity of genre painting and also the
emergence of the Hudson River School. As American art evolved in
terms of aesthetics and range of subjects, critical response
became increasingly discerning, and reviews became more widely
read. Beginning with American Art Union's Transactions in
1839, several new periodicals devoted to art including The
Crayon, founded in 1855; the Western Art Journal,
published in 1856; and The New Path, which began in 1863,
followed. All of these periodicals and many newspapers,
especially in New York, increased the detail and length of their
reviews; with some installments as lengthy as six issues.
After the Civil War, more and more critics included their bylines
in articles; thus further raising their profiles especially among
the cognoscenti. Notable among these were Clarence Cook, Mariana
Van Rensselaer Griswold and Russell Sturgis. At the same time,
art periodicals flourished and included The Art Journal,
founded in 1867; The Aldine, in 1868; Art
Interchange, in 1878; and Art Amateur, in 1879. Other
general publications, such as Harper's and Scribner's
Monthly, increasingly covered the art scene as well.
During the 1880s and 1890s, more and more writers turned their
attention to art, resulting in a whole new group of perceptive
and influential critics. Among these were S.G.W. Benjamin,
Sadakichi Hartmann, and Charles Caffin.
As the Twentieth Century began, these and other well-known
critics such as Mary Fanton Roberts and Royal Cortissoz and the
artists/critics Kenyon Cox and Guy Pene du Bois continued
regularly review the Academy's annuals in the press.
The National Academy is at 1083 Fifth Avenue; telephone,
212/369-4880.