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Joseph R. Meeker, View of the Meramec near Glencoe, 1872
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The term “landscape” most often brings to mind views of the
countryside like the works exhibited here. In the 19th century, newly-established
farms and homesteads became prime subject matter, painted in glowing hues
that continued to extol the merits of westward expansion. But a love of
the rural landscape was not limited to early artists. As cities grew and
became population centers, rural life often became romanticized and glorified
as a less-complicated, more genuine way to live.
For some painters, the artists’ colonies that sprang up in rural areas
across the country became places of escape – an aesthetic refuge from
the hectic pace of urban living. For others, their rural roots were never
overcome, despite years of international travel and training.
For the artists exhibited here, and countless others like them, there is
still merit in expressing nostalgic sentiments and local pride through portrayals
of rural geography and life. From the sway of wheat fields to the harvested
bales scattered across a rolling field, from the broad expanse of autumn
trees to a lone cardinal encompassed by a blanket of snow, all aspects of
the farming calendar appeal to the artists’ eyes as well as the viewers’.
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Lillian Thoele, Missouri Splendor, n.d.
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Thomas Hart Benton,
Cradling Wheat, 1939 |
Oscar Thalinger, Farm Landscape
in Winter , n.d. |
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Joe Jones, Wheat, ca. 1938 |
Mary Hallett Gronemeyer, Missouri Landscape, ca.
1970 |
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