World & I Online Magazine  
World & I School | World & I Homeschool | World & I College | World & I Library
 Username:   Password:     Subscribe   Register               About Us | Contact Us | FAQs
18-Year Archive Peoples of the World Book Review Worldwide Folktales Fathers of Faith
Search  
Sort by: Results Listed:
Date Range:    Advanced Search

Online Magazine
 
  Current Issue
Editorial
Current Issue
The Arts
Life
Natural Science
Culture
Book World
Modern Thought
  Resources
18-Year Archive
American Waves
Book Reviews
Ceremonies/Festivities
Eye on the High Court
Fathers of Faith
Footsteps of Lincoln
Millennial Moments
Peoples of the World
Profiles in Character
Teacher's Guide
Traveling the Globe
Worldwide Folktales
Writers and Writing

The Cultivated Landscapes of George Inness


Article # : 11575 

Section : THE ARTS
Issue Date : 9 / 1986  3,016 Words
Author : James F. Cooper
James F. Cooper is editor of American Arts Quarterly and art critic for the New York City Tribune.

       An exhibition of sixty-three paintings by George Inness (1825-1894), the American nineteenth-century painter, opened at Washington's National Gallery of Art on June 22, 1986. The paintings have been brought together from private and public collections, and have previously been displayed during the past twelve months at The Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York and the Los Angeles County Museum of Art. This is the first major showing of Inness' work to be seen by a national audience in nearly forty years.
       
        The exhibition, which was organized by Michael Quick, Curator of American Art at the Los Angeles Country Museum of Art, covers a span of fifty years in Inness' career, revealing the development of several artistic styles that evolved initially from a highly realistic one to the impressionist genre for which he is perhaps best known.
       
        Comparing Twilight, painted by George Inness in the year 1860, to his later work The Clouded Sun, painted in 1891, does not merely produce a confrontation between a product of youth and one characterizing the artist's full maturity. Rather, it juxtaposes a vision that is primarily American and idealistic - that revels in its creative intensity, is as formally composed as a seventeenth-century painting by Claude Lorrain, and is infused with a compelling personal vision of Nature's grandeur - against a work of atmospheric vagueness that precludes formal design and rendered detail, emphasizing instead brush work and impressionist color over content and personal expression.
       
        Understandably in our contemporary era, the impressionist works by George Inness are the ones that draw much of the critical acclaim and public attention accorded his work. Not that these later paintings are not to be admired for their sensitivity and intelligence. There is quality enough to justify how this extraordinarily gifted artist, despite his old age, could grasp the elements of a new art style and guide the course of American art so the twentieth century prepared to relinquish homegrown aesthetics and philosophical values, and accept succeeding waves of European Modernism sweeping across our shores.
       
        Indeed, the genius of George Inness was such that without any art training to speak of (except for some brief lessons lasting a total of three weeks), he mastered several styles during a career that spanned some fifty years and which encompassed the realism of the Hudson paintings by Frederick Church, Jasper Cropsey, and Sanford Gifford; European landscape painting by the Old Masters exemplified by Claude Lorrain; the French
... Read Full Article


Look for this article in Ask.com

Copyright © 2004 The World & I. All rights reserved. Terms of Use | Privacy Policy