1. Education

America! Painting History from the New World

At the Museo di Santa Giulia, Brescia - November 24, 2007-May 4, 2008

By , About.com Guide


Curated by Marco Goldin, Director of Linea d'ombra, some 240 paintings by 19th-century American artists were on display in conjunction with an International conference on this same topic. In addition to the paintings, 60 photographs, 10 sculptures, and 80 Native American objects from the 1800s were on view. The exhibition was mounted around four themes presented chronologically: classical landscapes, work of the Hudson River School, paintings by United States artists who had toured Italy and, finally, canvases by the American Impressionists. A fifth section was devoted entirely to Western art.

America!... was comprised of major loans from many U.S. museums, most notably the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston. The exhibition and conference were supported by the Terra Foundation for American Art and the Smithsonian Institution.

Images 1-12 of 16

© Museum of Fine Arts, Boston; used with permissionRiver in the Catskills, 1843© Wadsworth Atheneum Museum of Art, Hartford; used with permissionEvening in Arcadia, 1843© Museum of Fine Arts, Boston; used with permissionFishing Party, 1850© Mildred Lane Kemper Art Museum, Washington University, Saint Louis; used with permissionTwilight: Mount Desert Island, Maine, 1865
© The Barber Institute of Fine Arts, University of Birmingham; used with permissionSymphony in White No. 3, 1865-1867© Gilcrease Museum, Tulsa; used with permissionNocturne: The Solent, 1866© National Galleries of Scotland, Edinburgh; used with permissionNiagara Falls, from the American Side, 1867© Wadsworth Atheneum Museum of Art, Hartford; used with permissionVale of St Thomas, Jamaica, 1867
© Wadsworth Atheneum Museum of Art, Hartford; used with permissionCoast Scene with Figures (Beverly Shore), 1869© Museum of Fine Arts, Boston; used with permissionStorm in the Mountains, ca. 1870© Museum of Fine Arts, Boston; used with permissionLake Nemi, 1872© Museum of Fine Arts, Boston; used with permissionThe Fog Warning, 1885

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