Oklahoma City Museum of Art shows American Impressionism from The Phillips Collection
Written by Dexter Thurman Tuesday, 08 March 2011 02:44
OKLAHOMA CITY, OK - The Oklahoma City Museum of Art plays host to fifty-four works from the golden age of American impressionism, through January 18, 2009. American Impressionism: Paintings from The Phillips Collection includes celebrated American artists Childe Hassam, Maurice Prendergast, John Henry Twatchman, and J. Alden Weir. During the late nineteenth century and early twentieth century, these artists transformed the heroic American landscape into a modern idiom with a style of impressionism that blended European approaches to painting with American sensibilities and preferences. Organized by The Phillips Collection, the exhibition presents some of the finest examples of American impressionism from one collection.
Duncan Phillips, founder of The Phillips Collection, was among the early collectors of American impressionist paintings. From 1912 to 1922, he acquired an impressive collection of works by leading American painters working in an impressionistic style. When he opened his museum in the fall of 1921, the collection included 237 paintings, of which 87 works by 25 different artists were examples of American impressionism. A great number of these were by acknowledged “mature” masters of the style, such as Hassam, Theodore Robinson, Twatchman, Weir, and William Lathrop. The collection also included paintings by Ernest Lawson, Prendergast, Gifford Beal, and Helen Turner. While impressionistic works emphasize the seasons, changing light, and optical effects, American impressionist painters differed from their French counterparts by continuing to imbue their work with larger ideas related to the emotional and spiritual character of the landscape. The result was a fresh interpretation of America’s landscape and cities.
The exhibition also showcases the work of a lesser known but equally extraordinary artist, Allen Tucker. Phillips acquired Tucker’s paintings, Red Barns and The Rise, in 1926-1927. Considered by his contemporaries to be the “American van Gogh” because of his vigorous and animated brushwork, Tucker captured the attention of Phillips who sought to add an original van Gogh to his growing collection of modern art during this period.
DUNCAN PHILLIPS AND AMERICAN IMPRESSIONISM
Duncan Phillips was a man of his time in his enthusiasm for American impressionist painting. When he arrived in New York in 1910, with dreams of becoming an art critic, impressionism was America’s popular mainstream aesthetic style. By the end of the decade, he could count himself as one of its first collectors. American impressionist works were the foundation of the museum and significantly shaped its development, playing a vital role in Phillips’ maturing appreciation of abstraction.
In the early 1920s, the writings of contemporary critics, such as Roger Fry and Clive Bell, opened Phillips’ eyes to the intent of abstract art, and his collecting in that decade reflected his new understanding. He added very few American impressionist paintings to his collection after 1923. As Phillips became more knowledgeable in his understanding of abstraction, he turned his attention towards other artists. He was drawn not only to the new American realism, but also to the American moderns around Alfred Steiglitz and the artists of the School of Paris, including Pierre Bonnard, Edouard Vuillard, Henri Matisse, and Georges Braque.
Phillips’ collecting practices were ultimately driven by his desire to create a cohesive aesthetic collection independent of chronology or schools of painting. Only artists whom he saw as “modern in mind,” or whose work could be seen as links between past and present, found a permanent place in the collection. Visit The Oklahoma City Museum of Art at : www.okcmoa.com/
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