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Pennsylvania Impressionism

hardcoverOctober 25, 2002
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ISBN-13: 9780812237009 ISBN-10: 0812237005
Publisher
University of Pennsylvania Museum Publications
Binding
hardcover
Published
October 25, 2002
Weight
5.0 lbs
Dimensions
31.80×4.40×25.40 cm

About this book

Pennsylvania Impressionism by Peterson, Brian H.. hardcover edition. ISBN: 9780812237009.

American Impressionism was a movement deeply rooted in the American soil. Artists often spurned the cities, living and working in the numerous art colonies that sprang up throughout the country in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. One of the best known of these colonies formed in 1898 on the banks of the Delaware River north of Philadelphia, centered in the picturesque village of New Hope, Bucks County. Known as the Pennsylvania impressionists, this group of artists played a dominant role in the American art world of the 1910s and 1920s, winning major awards and sitting on prestigious exhibition juries. Their work was celebrated for its freedom from European influence, and was praised by the noted painter and critic Guy Pene du Bois as "our first truly national expression." Many of the Pennsylvania impressionists both studied and taught at the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts in Philadelphia, and their stylistic roots hearkened back to the "academy realism" practiced by Thomas Eakins and his followers. Edward Redfield was the generally acknowledged stylistic leader of the New Hope painters; his vigorously realistic, unsentimental brand of impressionism influenced several generations of artists associated with the group. However, what most characterized Pennsylvania impressionism was not a single, unified style but rather the emergence of many mature, distinctive voices: Daniel Garbers luminous, poetic renditions of the Delaware River; Fern Coppedges colorful village scenes; Robert Spencers lyrical views of mills and tenements; John Folinsbees moody, expressionistic snowscapes; and William L. Lathrops deeply felt, evocative Bucks County vistas. Pennsylvania impressionist artwork is now widely collected, and many works in private hands are shown here, as well as the holdings of the James A. Michener Museum, recognized as the most extensive public collection. Pennsylvania Impressionism explores in comprehensive and sumptuous detail this important American movement. Principally authored by the Micheners Senior Curator Brian H. Peterson, the book contains additional essays by art historians William H. Gerdts, Professor Emeritus of Art History at the City University of New York, and Sylvia Yount, Margaret and Terry Stent Curator of American Art at the High Museum in Atlanta. Also included are biographies of more than 75 artists and extensive color reproductions of their work. Intended for both a general audience and aficionados, this book will become the principal source for information about this important branch of American impressionism. Also of Interest— Edward W. Redfield Just Values and Fine Seeing Constance Kimmerle The Cities, the Towns, the Crowds The Paintings of Robert Spencer Brian H. Peterson