: The world's best collection of Hudson River School paintings
returns, after a two-and-a-half year national tour, to the
Wadsworth Atheneum Museum of Art, June 2-December 31. The
homecoming is billed as "American Splendor: Hudson River School
Masterworks from the Wadsworth Atheneum Collection."
In addition to more than 60 major paintings by Thomas Cole,
Frederic Church, Albert Bierstadt, Sanford Gifford, John Kensett
and others, "American Splendor" will include a newly acquired
landscape sketchbook, circa 1810-1820, by Daniel Wadsworth,
alongside watercolors, prints, popular travel guides and
Staffordshire plates bearing images of American scenery.
Niagara Falls, the Hudson River, Yosemite Valley and the vivid
leaves of autumn - the natural wonders of the New World
fascinated America's first school of landscape painters. The core
of the Wadsworth Atheneum's Hudson River school collection was
formed by two major patrons of American artists who lived in
Hartford - Daniel Wadsworth (1771-1848), a picturesque traveler,
amateur artist and architect, and founder of the Wadsworth
Atheneum, and Elizabeth Hart Jarvis Colt (1826-1905), widow of
arms manufacturer Samuel Colt and creator of a private picture
gallery during the Civil War. Many works were commissioned for
their personal enjoyment. Due to their patronage, the Wadsworth
Atheneum's collection reflects the evolving aesthetic
sensibilities of two generations of Hudson River School painters.
Frederic E. Church, "Vale of St Thomas, Jamaica," 1867, oil on
canvas, 48 5/16 by 84 5/8 inches. Wadsworth Atheneum Museum of
Art, Hartford; bequest of Elizabeth Hart Jarvis Colt, 1905.
In turn, the works reveal an emerging national identity that
is echoed in Nineteenth Century American literature (for instance,
Ralph Waldo Emerson's essay "On Art" and James Fenimore Cooper's
novel, The Last of the Mohicans).
The origins of the Hudson River School traditionally are
attributed to Cole, who arrived in New York City in 1825. A more
cerebral painter than John Trumbull, Alvan Fisher and others who
preceded him, Cole used his art as a moral as well as aesthetic
platform.
He broke from the traditional, European taste for manicured,
pastoral views, instead opting to depict the virginal, primeval
wilderness of the American Northeast. It was a paradise already
lost, however. Native Americans had been chased from their lands,
white settlements were long established and tourism was beginning
to boom.
Although the rise of an American school of landscape painters is
attributed to New York, one might argue that the Hudson River
School has roots in the Connecticut River Valley. Not only were
there important patrons, there were two leading artists in the
second generation of the Hudson River school who were Connecticut
natives - Church and Kensett.
It was Wadsworth who introduced the 17-year-old Hartford native
and aspirant artist Church to Cole, who in turn made Church his
sole apprentice. Wadsworth purchased Church's first mature
painting, "Hooker and Company journeying through the wilderness
from Plymouth to Hartford in 1636," 1846, for $130, acquiring it
for the newly founded Wadsworth Atheneum.

John F. Kensett, "Coast Scene With Figures (Beverly Shore),"
1869, oil on canvas, 36 by 60 3/8 inches. Wadsworth Atheneum
Museum of Art, Hartford; The Ella Gallup Sumner and Mary Catlin
Sumner Collection Fund, 1942.
The artist was 20 years of age. Later, during the Civil War,
Church advised Elizabeth Hart Jarvis Colt in assembling an
impressive private picture gallery for her mansion, "Armsmear," in
Hartford. He introduced her to Bierstadt, William Bradford,
Kensett, Gifford and others, from whom she commissioned paintings.
"American Splendor: Hudson River School Masterworks from the
Wadsworth Atheneum Collection" is curated by Elizabeth Mankin
Kornhauser, Krieble curator of American painting and sculpture at
the Wadsworth Atheneum. The catalog, titled Hudson River
School Masterworks from the Wadsworth Atheneum Museum of Art,
and published by Yale University Press (October 2003) is $45 and
available in The Museum Shop.
The Wadsworth Atheneum Museum of Art is at 600 Main Street. For
information, www.wadsworthatheneum.org or 860-278-2670.