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Theodore Kauffman, Westward the Star
of Empire, 1867
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In the early days of the European art academies, landscape painting was
considered a lesser genre, or type, of art, because it did not deal with
the human being as a subject, and so landscapes most often occurred as a
background setting for historical scenes. By the nineteenth century, artists
were reveling in the beauty of the natural landscape for its own sake.
In America, European artists brought these attitudes about the value
and use of landscape to the young nation. Early artist/explorers documented
events that would shape the nation, while later in the 19th century the
concept of narrative-laden landscape painting would become a tool for
Manifest Destiny and the validation of westward expansion. Today, artists
continue to incorporate history into landscape, sometimes commemorating
important moments of personal history, at other times romantically evoking
the recent past and even presenting new visual interpretations of pivotal
events that shaped our nation’s development.
These images, whatever their date, speak to us not only
of the changing notions of artistic style and the capricious nature of
historical memory, but also of landscape’s ability to represent
our lives. As Ralph Waldo Emerson phrased it; “Visible distance
behind and before us, is respectively our image of memory and hope.”
[Nature; Addresses and Lectures, 1849]
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Gary Lucy, The Yellowstone: Evening Sky
on the Missouri River, 1832, 1992 |
Martyl, Perryville Station,
1940 |
Carl Wimar, Jim Birch's Grave, 1850s
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