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'Frederic
Edwin Church was the American Nation's First Landscape
Painter when Landscape painting was the Nation's First
Art.'
The Tribune.
'A Great Work of Art is a Delight and a Lesson.'
Theodore Winthrop. |
Rocky
Forest Pool 1857
Sight
Size: 62.8 cms x 77.7 cms. 24¾ ins x 303/5 ins
Rocky
Forest Pool 1857
exemplifies the pristine clarity of vision that characterizes
Church's more mature draughtsmanship and reveals luminously
the sublime spirituality of nature.
'After
1855, Church gradually moved towards an entirely new conception
of the American Landscape in which wilderness became the dominant
theme. Also during the 50's there was 'a new awareness of
the ecological value of the wilderness within the sensitive
balance of nature.'
'Man
has for too long forgotten that the Earth was given to him
for usufruct alone, and not for consumption, still less for
profligate waste.' Man in Nature: George P. Marsh.
By the mid 50's, Church - aware of this - increasingly came
to doubt his formerly unquestioning faith in 'the sanctity
of National progress and the attainability of the Pastoral
Ideal.'
Rocky
Forest Pool 1857 depicts
'the perfect and sublime wilderness'
where, 'no sawn tree stumps mar the foreground and there is
no saw dust from the mill' and for the first time in his work
of the 50's, there is no presence of Man nor of his detritus.
The domestic, pastoral and rural promise of Home
by the Lake 1852
* and A
Country Home 1854
has given way to a luminous pantheistic vision, 'by which
we may ascend to a great Temple.' The Crayon - commenting
on Durand's In
the Woods 1855.
Like
Asher B. Durand's In
the Woods 1855,
Rocky
Forest Pool 1857
also 'invites the viewer into its sheltered recesses for a
moment of meditation and contemplation.'
The scale is more human and inviting, the atmosphere more
peaceful and soothing but the 'luminous evanescence'
of Rocky
Forest Pool 1857
transcends In
the Woods 1855 in this and several other remarkable
ways.
*
Sold for, $8,250,000 by Sotheby's, New York
on May 24th 1989
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