"Remember the Ladies: Women of the Hudson River School"

6 May 2010
Sarah Barstow, Woodland Interior, 1865

click to enlarge

Sarah Barstow, Woodland Interior, 1865

“It is important to recast 19th century American women landscape painters no longer as the exception… but rather as exceptional,” says Nancy Siegel, a co-curator of a new exhibiton at Cedar Grove: The Thomas Cole National Historic Site, in Catskill, New York.

Jennifer Krieger, managing partner of Hawthorne Fine Arts in Manhattan, told audiences at a lecture on Sunday of a "courageous, determined, hardworking and keenly observant group of women."

Artists such as Sarah Cole, Charlotte Coman, Eliza Greatorex, Elizabeth Jerome, Mary Blood Mellen, Evelina Mount, Harriet Cany Peale, Jane Stuart, Laura Woodward, and others, whose work is on par with their male counterparts of the Hudson River School, "captured the beauty, awe and majesty of the natural landscape”.



Categories: American art

More News Feed Headlines
  • Harry W.  and Mary Margaret Anderson, and their daughter Mary Patricia Anderson Pence, standing in front of Franz Kline, Figure 8, 1952 and Mark Rothko, Pink and White over Red, 1957.  Both are works being donated to Stanford University.
    Stanford University has chosen the New York-based architectural firm Ennead Architects to design the structure that will house the University’s recent acquisition, the impressive Anderson ...
  • Elizabeth Taylor
    Seven world records were set at the jewel auction of the late Hollywood screen legend, and ardent jewelry lover, Elizabeth Taylor, that took place at Christie’s New York this week. On Tuesday, 80 singular lots were offered and all 80 quickly sold, fetching a total of $115.9 million, making it the most valuable private collection of jewels ever sold at auction. On Thursday, a Christian Dior evening gown of silver encrusted brocade swept to $362,500...
  • Henry Koerner (American, 1915-1991) Under the Overpass, 1949.  Oil on masonite, 30 x 38 inches.  Courtesy of Jonathan Boos.
    The fourth incarnation of The American Art Fair triumphed at a dazzling new venue from Nov. 28 to Dec. 1, 2011. Held for the first time at the Bohemian National Hall, a Renaissance Revival style building on Manhattan's Upper East Side, the focused fair featured 17 leading gallery exhibitors offering prime examples of historic American art.
  • Julien Hudson, 1811-1844 American.  Creole Boy With A Moth, 1835, oil on canvas, courtesy of a private collection; photo courtesy of Fodera Fine Art Conservation, Ltd.
    A groundbreaking exhibition opened Dec. 9 at the Worcester Art Museum entitled “In Search of Julien Hudson: Free Artist of Color in Pre-Civil War New Orleans.” Julien Hudson (1811-1844) is the second-earliest documented portrait painter of African descent to work in the United States. Little-known today, Hudson died an untimely, somewhat mysterious death, and only fragments of his oeuvre survive to tell his story.

Enter e-mail address to receive art news daily.
Subscribe

ArtfixDaily Blogs