Frederic Remington. Photo courtesy of the Frederic Remington
Art Museum, Ogdensburg, N.Y.
Just as his career appeared heading in new and promising
directions, and with his confidence and abilities at a high level,
the painter/sculptor died of an attack of appendicitis. He was only
48.
For all their quality and appeal, this is the first exhibition to
focus on Remington's late nighttime paintings. First proposed by
Anne Morand, curator of Art collections at the Gilcrease Museum,
and organized by Nancy K. Anderson, the National Gallery of Art's
associate curator of American and British paintings, "Frederic
Remington: The Color of Night" is one of the most appealing and
rewarding American art exhibitions of 2003.
After opening at the National Gallery this spring, the show is on
view at the Gilcrease Museum (August 10-November 9) and travels
to the Denver Art Museum (December 13-March 14, 2004).
The exhibition is comprised of about 30 of Remington's finest
night scenes, tracing the evolution of his maturing technique and
varied subject matter. The accompanying catalog, the first on the
subject, is exceptionally attractive and informative.
The man who popularized the Old West was an Easterner, born and
bred. He was born in Canton and raised in nearby Ogdensburg in
New York's North Country, the son of a Civil War hero and
journalist.
As a youngster Remington dreamed of a military career, but his
interest in art and athletics prompted him to attend Yale
University, where he studied art with John F. Weir and played on
the football team coached by Walter Camp. Following his father's
death in 1880, he dropped out and worked in a series of
unsatisfactory clerical jobs.
In 1883, having come into his inheritance, Remington traveled
west, where he failed as a sheep rancher and saloon keeper in
Kansas. Along the way, however, he pursued his interest in
drawing, focusing on western subjects. Although amateurish at
first, they attracted the attention of "Harper's Weekly," which
began publishing them in the mid-1880s.
Before long, Remington established a reputation for skilled,
accurate and dramatic renderings of Indians, cavalrymen, cowboys,
ranchers and horses and other animals of the American West. It
was a theme of great interest to eastern readers. Indeed, many
easterners formed their perceptions of the West from Remington's
work.
For over a decade he worked at a feverish pace, visiting sites in
the West and creating a large number of illustrations for popular
journals. He augmented his standing as an authority on the
frontier by writing numerous articles on the subject. The fame
and success of the rotund, outspoken eastern cowboy were secure
by the 1890s. He became an associate, but never achieved full
membership in the National Academy of Design, on the grounds that
he was a mere illustrator.
Deciding before he turned 40 that he wanted to be remembered as a
serious artist rather than as an illustrator, Remington set out
to learn more about painting with color in a looser style. Many
of his illustrative images had been executed in muted tones of
black, white and grey.
Between 1890 and 1909 he lived and worked in a spacious house in
New Rochelle, N.Y., filling a colorful studio with artifacts of
the West. He moved in his last year to a new home and studio, an
imposing stone structure with expansive grounds, in Ridgefield,
Conn. It is extant in private hands.
As a war hero's son, Remington was keen on seeing military combat
up close and personal. He got his chance in 1898 when the US
battleship Maine blew up in Havana harbor, triggering the
Spanish-American War.
Armed with war correspondent credentials, he arrived in Cuba in
the summer of 1898 "expecting to witness a grand military
spectacle. Instead, he found confusion, incompetence and enormous
suffering," writes Anderson in the exhibition catalog.
Rather than the dramatic cavalry charges he anticipated,
Remington found American troops under attack from elusive
guerilla fighters. "As he confronted the anxious uncertainty of
jungle warfare, Remington's ardor for combat quickly cooled,"
says Anderson.
Having taken cover behind the lines, he missed the battle of San
Juan Hill when Theodore Roosevelt and his Rough Riders made their
famous charge. Instead of witnessing the pivotal battle, the
artist-correspondent observed the terrible suffering of those
wounded in combat. Ill with fever, Remington soon left Cuba.
"Matured, sobered, and haunted by this experience of modern
warfare, Remington began to explore - in his art - the
ramifications of what he had seen," Anderson observes. In a
series of illustrations he conveyed what he had witnessed in
Cuba.
During a trip to Montana and Wyoming he returned to western
themes on which he had built his reputation, but with works quite
different from those he had done before the war. His subject
remained the West, but as Anderson puts it, "the prize he sought
was recognition as a serious artist rather than as a celebrated
illustrator."
Among the most interesting - and best - of Remington's postwar
paintings are the nocturnes in his exhibition. Understandably,
they eventually brought him the artistic respect he sought.
"Layered, complex and technically innovative, they are also
profoundly personal works of art," according to Anderson. "Filled
with danger, threatened violence and menacing silence, they
mirror - metaphorically - Remington's experience in war," she
stresses.
Remington appears to have become interested in the idea of
nighttime paintings in the fall of 1899 after seeing an
exhibition at New York's Union League Club of works by a
California artist who is little known today, Charles Rollo
Peters. A James McNeill Whistler fan, Peters admired the
expatriate American's nocturnes and after studying in Europe, he
returned to California and started creating moonlit paintings.
Sixteen of his night compositions were included in the display
that intrigued Remington.
Remington also studied and admired the work of such American
Impressionists as Childe Hassam, Willard Metcalf, John H.
Twachtman and J. Alden Weir. Toward the end he examined the
symbolist reveries of French painters Emile Bernard and Paul
Gauguin. These influences manifested themselves in the decorative
and contemplative feel of Remington's concluding paintings.
Remington began his experiments with after-dark art based on
moonlit sightings from a skiff launched from his retreat,
Inglenook Island in the St Lawrence River near his boyhood home
in Ogdensburg. Two early nocturnes were deigned to illustrate his
novel, "The Way of an Indian." These transitional works were
dependent on the text for their full meaning.
"The spare quality of the landscape [in these paintings] and the
lack of surface detail signaled a significant change in
Remington's compositional technique," Anderson observes. Soon he
was turning out works of increasingly technical sophistication,
unrelated to written words.
These tentative first experiments in nocturnal images
incorporate, as Anderson puts it, "the qualities that [came] to
distinguish the mature nocturnes: incomplete narrative, unseen
danger, ominous silence and threatening darkness. Rather than
answer questions (as Remington's illustrations often did), the
late nocturnes pose questions."
In "The Scout: Friend or Foes?" (1902-05), for example, an Indian
peers from horseback toward low, flat structures on the horizon,
uncertain whether they represent friends or foes. The possibility
of danger ahead, albeit so far unseen, adds to the drama of the
image. It is a technique often employed by Winslow Homer in
seascapes and hunting scenes.
A similar note of uncertainty infuses an earlier work, "The Old
Stage Coach of the Plains" (1901), in which a candlelit coach,
manned by a rifle-toting guard who peers into the darkness,
pushes toward the viewer under a starry night sky. It is unclear
whether some form of danger lies ahead.
A note of caution also pervades "A Reconnaissance" (1902) showing
three cavalrymen, one mounted and two surveying the unknown
beyond from the crest of a hill. Moonlight reflecting on the
snowy ground adds to the drama of the moment. "A Reconnaissance"
sold at Christie's in 1999 for an artist's record $5,172,000. A
somewhat lesser nocturne, not in the current exhibition, "Scare
in a Pack Train" (1908), fetched $1,879,500 at Christie's last
year.
Remington's new works were warmly greeted by critics, but the
artist remained unsatisfied about his ability to accurately
convey the colors of night. He felt that he had "worked too long
in black and white," but vowed to get his colors right "if I only
live long enough."
Two of his finest night works, completed that same year (1905),
suggest that Remington was too hard on himself. "Coming to the
Call" and "Evening on a Canadian Lake" are deftly composed and
beautifully painted. The colors are gorgeous. They "confirm that
Remington had left behind his illustrator's concern with detail,
pared his compositional elements to a minimum, and engaged his
viewer by leaving his pictorial narratives incomplete," says
curator Anderson. The stunning colors - romantic and warm in
"Evening" and crisp and appealing in "Coming" - seem just right.
The compelling nature of "Evening" is augmented by the sense that
an unknown sound or movement has caught the attention of the
stalwart canoers. In "Coming," the man in the canoe is about to
shoot a moose dramatically silhouetted against the glow of a
sumptuous sunset. "In both images, Remington created frozen
moments of peril," notes Anderson.
Similarly, in the strikingly lit "Fired On" (1907), an attack
from outside the picture frame has prompted a frenzy of activity
among men and horses. This memorable frozen moment was the first
Remington painting owned by an American museum; it is a prize in
the collection of the Smithsonian American Art Museum.
Remington often used light sources outside the picture to
illuminate and dramatize night scenes. In this sense, once again,
his paintings are close in spirit to those of Homer.
In "The Grass Fire" (1908), for instance, a randomly arranged
group of Native Americans are dramatically illuminated by a
largely unseen fire, at which they reverently gaze. In "In From
the Night Herd" (1907), a kind of poetic elegy to night light, a
rider is finishing his patrol around the cattle and is about to
rouse his successor.
Almost to the end, Remington continued to fret about how best to
convey the effects of night. In 1908, however, he wrote in his
diary that he had finally found "how to do the silver sheen of
moonlight.: "The Luckless Hunter" (1909) showing a lone, huddled
rider mounted on a bedraggled pony bathed in greenish moonlight,
reflects Remington's new-found success. As the unsuccessful
hunter braves the rigors of winter, traversing the snowy plain,
hunger and starvation - possibly death - seem to hover in the
wings.
Remington's annual one-man show at New York's Knoedler Galleries
in 1908, featuring nine nocturnes, drew critical raves. One
critic wrote, "it would be difficult to congratulate Mr Remington
too warmly" for his "night scenes." Noting what a hit the
Knoedler show had been, the artist could at last write a friend,
"I am no longer an illustrator."
In "The Call for Help (At Bay)" (circa 1908), one of the stars of
the Knoedler display, as well as this exhibition, pale moonlight
reveals three terrified horses cornered against a rail fence by a
couple of baying wolves. Will help come from the nearby lit-up
cabin? Remington offers no resolution, only an "elegantly
composed and beautifully painted study of elemental fear," writes
Anderson.
In "Moonlight, Wolf" (circa 1908), one of the most riveting
images on view, a lone wolf gazes directly at the viewer. Might
the animal attack the viewer? "The threat of danger, an element
present in nearly all of Remington's nocturnes, is now directed
out, at the viewer," Anderson observes.
A kind of cool tension pervades "Shotgun Hospitality" (1908), in
which the glow of the campfire highlights a white man sitting
calmly with his rifle across his knees as three possibly
unwelcome Indians pay him a visit. The outcome of this
confrontation is, characteristically, uncertain.
Remington used what he called an "unearthly" light - "the curious
yellow glow of a rainstorm" - along with a jagged bolt of
lightening and a torrential downpour to animate the hyperactive
horses, riders and thundering cattle in the highly dramatic "The
Stampede by Lightening (The Stampede)" (1908). It is a wonderful
picture.
Remington's new vision is summed up by "The Outlier" (1909),
depicting a solitary Indian, naked to the waist, mounted on a
stationary horse and holding a rifle across his lap. The setting
is illuminated by a bright yellow full moon. The harmonious
colors, deft composition and dignified depiction of a Native
American in his natural world makes this a memorable vignette.
His friend Hassam, Remington reported, "thinks...[it is] best of
my pictures." Hassrick calls this striking oil "the last and best
of Remingtons."
In the final decade of his life, Remington completed no fewer
than 70 night paintings. "Astonishing in their coloristic effect,
the paintings reflect an artistic consciousness tempered by war
and loss. Stripped of extraneous detail, the paintings are modern
in their spare compositional structure and in their anxious
uncertainty," says Anderson. The nocturnes are, as Anderson
summarizes, "filled with dark disquiet."
Remington's final burst of creativity came soon after the closing
of the western frontier, and coincided with changes in American
society - immigration, industrialization and urbanization - that
greatly troubled the artist. Many see his nocturnes as elegies of
a vanished past.
Certainly an examination of his late works, especially these
nocturnal canvases, reveals that Remington was much more than a
conventional, nostalgic recorder of a romanticized Old West. The
imaginative, experimental and powerful nature of these highly
personal, concluding works, make them perhaps the most compelling
of his career.
He died at age 48 in his Ridgefield home, of complications
following an appendectomy. We are left to ponder what he might
have achieved if he had lived longer.
Respected critic Royal Cortissoz noted that Remington was "a
talent that is always ripening, an artistic personality that is
always pushing forward." Agreeing, art historian Eugen Neuhaus
noted Remington's "feeling for growth. He never stood still; he
always improved; and he undoubtedly would have reached a high
ideal if he had been granted a longer life."

"Evening on Canadian Lake," Frederic Remington, 1905. Oil on
canvas from the collection of William I. Koch.
In his relatively brief career Remington produced more than
3,000 paintings and drawings, 22 bronze sculptures, a novel, a
Broadway play and over 100 articles and stories. He will always be
appreciated for his vivid depictions of the vanishing West - and
increasingly for the poetry and beauty of his late paintings. More
and more he is being recognized as one of the finest colorists of
his era.
Whatever his unrealized potential, Remington's grand nocturnes
underscore his arrival as a skilled fine artist. Kudos to curator
Anderson and all concerned for mounting this appealing and
rewarding exhibition. Art historian Carol Clark had it about
right when she observed of the show that "This new and
imaginative look at Remington's night pictures secures the
artist's place in the history of American art, rather than
exclusively in the history of western American art."
The exhibition catalog, principally authored by Anderson, is the
first scholarly publication ever devoted to Remington's
nocturnes. It is a beauty. Anderson writes about the impact of
the artist's Spanish-American War experiences and the evolution
of his night paintings, while Yale art historian Alexander
Nemerov deals with the impact of photography on the painter's
work, and Barnard College English professor William C. Sharpe
examines Remington's place within the tradition of nocturnes in
music, literature and art. An appendix contains observations who
worked on his canvases.
There are 136 color plates, many with commentary from the
artist's personal diaries and letters and from contemporary
critics, on individual Remington paintings and 24 black-and-white
illustrations.
Copublished by Princeton University Press and the National
Gallery, the 228-page book is available in hardcover ($49.95) and
softcover ($29.95). It is an essential addition to the
bookshelves of all fans of American art, especially those
interested in Remington and art of the American West.
The Gilcrease Museum is located at 1400 Gilcrease Museum Road
in Tulsa. For information, 918-596-2700 or 888-655-2278 or
www.gilcrease.org. The Denver Art Museum is at 13th Avenue and
Acoma Street. For information, 720-865-5000 or
www.denverartmuseum.org.