:"Finding Religion: American Art from the Hartford Steam Boiler
Collection," a new exhibition on view January 14 through May 28
at the Florence Griswold Museum, explores how the ideas of
religion and spirituality were manifested and conveyed in
American art between the Eighteenth and Twentieth Centuries.
Using 40 works drawn entirely from the museum's Hartford Steam
Boiler collection, "Finding Religion" examines the various paths
artists such as Ralph Earl, Frederic Church, Fidelia Bridges and
John Twachtman have taken in their quest to find religion in the
world around them.
From sweeping and majestic images of the natural world to highly
personal images of family and home, this exhibition explores the
many expressions of faith and spirituality in art and considers
their roles in shaping American culture. "The breadth of the
Hartford Steam Boiler collection presents the opportunity to
consider the significant transitions of national self-definition
through a series of new lenses," noted Dr Diane
Apostolos-Cappadona, a leading scholar in the fields of art,
religious and cultural studies at Georgetown University. "The
exhibition challenges us to look at these works from the
perception of, and in response to, a variety of religious and
spiritual expressions."
Organized by Dr Emily Weeks Florentino, the museum's former
curator of American art, "Finding Religion: American Art from the
Hartford Steam Boiler Collection" is divided into several themes,
with historical evidence and scholarly observations used to
interpret each section. Often, the relationship between art and
religion can be simple and transparent, as viewed in The Good
Word section of the exhibition. Here, the paintings are all
portraits dating from 1793 to 1890. Visual clues, often a Bible
or other devotional text, allude to the sitter's steadfast
spiritual resolve. The striking and highly stylized features in
Ammi Phillips' "Portrait of Katherine Salisbury Newkirk Hickok,"
circa 1825, reference aspects of Puritanism found in that era.
Whenever organized religion has seemed too limiting, Americans
have often turned to the natural world for inspiration. In the
Nineteenth Century, popular philosophical movements held that
nature was "God's other book," a sacred text of truly awesome
proportions. The section Landscapes of Belief uses the art of
Frederic Church, Thomas Cole and others to explain these values.
Taking the observation of, and devotion to, nature one step
further, artists influenced by the British art critic and
philosopher John Ruskin (1813-1900) believed that the informed
observance of nature was nothing less than "following the finger
of God." In his view, art, religion and nature were inextricably
intertwined. John F. Kensett's "Study of a Burdoch Plant" and
Fidelia Bridges' "Thistle in a Field," 1875, exemplify this
philosophy.
Also in the 1800s, many Christian denominations began redefining
religion as a matter of the heart rather than the mind. Paintings
from the section titled Morality, Domesticity and the Modern
Madonna, such as John Henry Twachtman's "Barnyard," circa
1890-1900, and George de Forest Brush's "In the Garden," 1923,
are rich with images of women and children and illustrate the
parallel that was drawn between the American mother and child and
the Madonna and Child.
In the early Nineteenth Century, America's wilderness spoke of
divine promise, but it was the city that mattered at the
century's end. The paintings selected to represent the theme
Civil Religion: History, Nationalism and the Idea of America,
such as Guy Wiggins' patriotic "Washington's Birthday at Madison
Square," 1927, suggest that the booming metropolitan environment
of America, although fraught with problems, unified individual
citizens, and, like a church, offered a public space in which
citizens could join together for a spirited observation of
national unity. The gradual shift in America's religious focus -
from reading the Bible to "reading" a monument, and from
practicing pious acts to revering patriotic icons - has led many
to see modern America as secular.
The Florence Griswold Museum is at 96 Lyme Street. For
information, 860-434-5542 or www.florencegriswoldmuseum.org.