Home | Business News | Browse by Publication | A | Americas (English Edition)

Brush stroke explorations: American-born Frederic Edwin Church, whose grand canvases were created with precise accuracy and sublime form, exemplified landscape paintings during an age of discovery.

Publication: Americas (English Edition)
Publication Date: 01-NOV-08
Format: Online
Delivery: Immediate Online Access

Article Excerpt
[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

In an age when a photograph taken with a cell phone can instantly beam across the globe, it may be hard to imagine an unseen, yet to be discovered world, or to appreciate how a young, scientifically-minded American artist, Frederic Edwin Church, could reveal the grandeur of the nineteenth century Western hemisphere to a curious world.

As California-bound gold rushers bypassed South America in clipper ships and America's Civil War pitted brother against brother, Frederic Church was fast becoming America's most influential and financially successful landscape painter. His billboard sized paintings were each presented as a single work of art at greatly anticipated events. They were shown by ticketed admission in dramatically set, gas lit rooms; draped with black crepe theatrical curtains and surrounded by exotic plants; and presented in ornate frames that resembled the windows of a grand mansion revealing breathtaking vistas rendered with almost photographic precision. Church amazed America and the British Isles with spectacles of erupting volcanoes; thundering waterfalls; tropical rain forests illuminated by complete double rainbows; and the Aurora Borealis above towering icebergs. These formidable works of art gave his audience views of places they would otherwise never have been able to see in their lifetime.

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

Frederic Edwin Church (1826-1900), a direct descendant of Hartford, Connecticut founder Richard Church, was a fifth generation American and the son of a silversmith/jeweler/insurance adjuster, who hoped his son would enter the business world. But what energetic young man of vision wanted to sit behind a desk during an age of discovery?

Frederic Church's vision was shaped by the exciting discoveries and explorations of his day. He was sixteen years old when America's Exploratory Expedition, led by Charles Wilkes, returned from four years of circumnavigating the world; mapping Antarctica and the Pacific Northwest; and descending into Hawaii's volcanoes. The expedition's artist, Titian Peale, the son of a famous painter and Philadelphia museum founder, had an accurate eye and was also an expert marksman. In addition to his sketches, he brought back 2,150 birds, 134 mammals, and 588 species of fish in the largest collection ever obtained from an expedition....

View this article FREE - Now for a Limited Time, try Goliath Business News
Free for 3 Days!



More articles from Americas (English Edition)
Lifeline of a lake: since Bolivia and Peru share a common border with ..., November 01, 2008
Leading ladies Latin America: in less than four decades, these commend..., November 01, 2008
Promoting a culture of peace.(OAS), November 01, 2008
Fighting crime.(OAS), November 01, 2008
Observing Africa.(OAS)(Brief article), November 01, 2008

Looking for additional articles?
Search our database of over 3 million articles.

Looking for more in-depth information on this industry?
Search our complete database of Industry & Market reports by text, subject, publication name or publication date.

About Goliath
Whether you're looking for sales prospects, competitive information, company analysis or best practices in managing your organization, Goliath can help you meet your business needs.

Our extensive business information databases empower business professionals with both the breadth and depth of credible, authoritative information they need to support their business goals. Whether it be strategic planning, sales prospecting, company research or defining management best practices - Goliath is your leading source for accurate information.