I enjoyed meeting Scott Shields. He is an engaging speaker. Scotts' Lecture was very good. I took notes and it reminded me of my art history classes and how much I loved them. The first half summarized his work in his new book . "Artists at Continent's End. The Monterey Peninsula Art Coloney 1875-1907 " Here's what I learned:
Plein Air actually started in Northern California not South
Started earlier, in Monterey, not in Carmel after earthquake
1875 a french artist Tavernier.
His book took 7 years to write and covers 40 artists from 1875 to 1907.
He pointed out artists who never let the facts get in the way of a good painting and who took nature beyond what was there in intepretting the landscape.
Lots of artists I had never heard of. Many are unknown because their work was destroyed in a fires(note to self, distribute work widely in coming years)
Artists to look up:
Julian Ricks
Elizabeth Strong
Yelland
Innis
Keith
Peters- spooky nocturnals painted from memory
Arthur and Lucinda Matthews
Redmond- quiet tonalist works vs the poppies
Francis McComas - early wild and bold watercolors became conventional
Evelyn McCormick- Arizona gardens
Mary Brady- not well known, undervalued rare. (Wouldn't it be fun to find one)
Isabel Hunter-pastels able to flip between tonalist and impressionist styles.
Mary de Neale Morgan
William Ritchell- battle between land and sea
Armand Hanson
The second half of the lecture was a walk through the exhibit. Next post.
Showing posts with label monterey art coloney. Show all posts
Showing posts with label monterey art coloney. Show all posts
Tuesday, June 12, 2007
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)