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American Encounters: The Simple Pleasures of Still Life, May 16 - September 14, 2015

 Series

Scope and Contents

From the Collection:

Materials include master checklists; exhibition design materials; installation images; and publications pertainting to exhibitions organized and hosted by Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art in 2015.

Dates

  • May 16 - September 14, 2015

Conditions Governing Use

Images in this collection are either protected by copyright or are the property of CBMAA .

For requests to license high resolution art images, please contact reproductions@crystalbridges.org

For requests to license high resolution installation images, please contact library@crystalbridges.org

Exhibition Summary

American Encounters: The Simple Pleasures of Still Life examined the roots of still-life painting in the works of French and Dutch still-life masters of the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, and explored how late eighteenth- and early nineteenth-century American artists adapted European still-life tradition to American taste, character, and experience. The works included ranged from the plain compositions of the nation’s earliest still lifes to the widely popular trompe l’oeil works of the Gilded Age. This was the culminating presentation of the American Encounters series—which aimed to broaden appreciation for and dialogue about American art both within the US. and abroad. The series was an ongoing collaboration between Crystal Bridges; the High Museum in Atlanta, GA; The Terra Foundation for American Art in Chicago, IL; and the musée du Louvre in Paris, France. The ten masterpieces in the exhibition spoke to the diversity of the still-life genre in the US and ranged from works by artists De Scott Evans, Martin Johnson Heade, Joseph Biays Ord, William Sydney Mount and Raphaelle Peale to trompe l’oeil masterworks by John Haberle, William Michael Harnett and George Cope. Two paintings by John-Baptiste-Siméon Chardin and Abraham Mignon demonstrated the European examples frequently emulated by American artists first experimenting with still life in the early 1800s. Works in the exhibition from Crystal Bridges included Raphaelle Peale’s Corn and Cantaloupe (ca. 1813), John Haberle’s Small Change (1887), and De Scott Evans’ Daisies (ca. 1885). Peale is considered one of America’s first painters of still lifes. He appropriated the traditional European format small tabletop still life and adapted it to highlight characteristically American products such as corn, yams, and canteloupe. Haberle’s illusionistic money painting addresses controversial monetary politics and historic events of the time. Evans’s Daisies continues the tradition of Dutch vanitas still lifes such as Abraham Mignon’s late 17th century Flowers in a Crystal Vase on a Stone Pedestal, with a Dragonfly, also included in the exhibition. However, instead of exotic flowers, Evans’s humble American bouquet comprises common, uncultivated flowers and celebrates the beauty of the native plants. Together, these works provide a focused examination of the development of a distinctly American voice within the still-life tradition.

Extent

From the Class: In progress Linear Feet

Language of Materials

From the Collection: English