:The Hancock House is exhibiting "Oil & Water: Paintings of
Lake George 1860-1945" through August 26. This exhibition marks
the reopening of the museum's refurbished Assembly Room, and
offers an opportunity to view the region through the eyes of many
American painters who revered this area and who through their
works gave it national prominence. The Ticonderoga Historical
Society will celebrate its 30th anniversary as steward of The
Hancock House with a public reception on Thursday, July 6, at 6
pm.
Artists in the exhibition include William M. Hart, Richard
William Hubbard, John Bunyan Bristol, John Henry Hill, Nelson
Augustus Moore, Nikolay Tysland Leganger, Harry Willson Watrous,
Gustave Cimiotti, Walter Paris and Eugene Spiro.
"In 1826, James Fenimore Cooper wrote 'The beauties of Lake
George are well known,'" said Stuart Cartwright, guest curator
for the exhibit. "This truth is documented by a generation of
artists who followed Cooper and his artistic friend Thomas Cole
beyond the Hudson River into these fabled mountains."
The summer exhibit brings together beautiful landscape paintings
that display scenes of Lake George and surrounding area. Black
Mountain, Tongue Mountain, Sabbath Day Point, Kattskill Bay, the
Ausable River and Lake Champlain served as inspiration for these
important American artists. Fort Ticonderoga is the subject of a
Cimiotti oil.
Walter Paris (1842-1906), "Sailboat on Lake George," 1894,
watercolor on sketchbook paper, 7 by 19 1/2 inches.
The nearby hamlet of Hague on Lake George was summer home to
distinguished artists who captured the lake in the years following
the Civil War.
"Robert Melvin Decker invited many of his fellow artists,
including David Johnson, Aaron Draper Shattuck and John Bunyan
Bristol, to his studio on the lake in the Nineteenth Century,"
said Cartwright. "One of Hague's most prominent summer residents,
Harry Watrous, served as president of the art world's prestigious
National Academy of Design."
Originally built in 1926, The Hancock House was a gift to the New
York State Historical Association from Ticonderoga philanthropist
Horace A. Moses. He built the house for "the purpose of
perpetuating American Traditions in History and the Fine Arts."
Hancock House, 6 Moses Circle, is at the crossroads of Lake
George, Lake Champlain and the Eastern Adirondacks on Route 9N at
the Liberty Monument circle. Ticonderoga is less than an hour's
drive from Lake Placid, Saratoga, or Bennington, Vermont.
For additional information, www.thehancockhouse.org or
518-585-7868.