AccessMyLibrary provides FREE access to over 30 million articles from top publications available through your library.

George Inness and the unfinished painting.

The Magazine Antiques

| November 01, 2003 | Bell, Adrienne Baxter | COPYRIGHT 2003 Brant Publications, Inc. This material is published under license from the publisher through the Gale Group, Farmington Hills, Michigan.  All inquiries regarding rights should be directed to the Gale Group. (Hide copyright information)Copyright

The communicative power of the unfinished work of art was a primary source of inspiration for the American landscape painter George Inness (Fig.1). He recognized the heightened capacity of an unfinished painting or sculpture to conjure ideas and emotions, and for artistic, historical, psychological, jurisdictional, personal, and theological reasons he mined the unfinished work of art for a pictorial grammar on which to build a new language of landscape painting. His late landscapes show how he came to identify as one of his highest goals the challenge of creating works imbued with the thought-provoking potential of the unfinished painting.

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

Born in Newburgh, New York, Inness received little formal artistic training. As was the case for the majority of his Hudson River school colleagues, he learned his trade by studying mechanical reproductions of old master paintings, notably landscapes by Claude Lorrain (1600-1682). Inness's earliest works, such as the accomplished A Bit of the Roman Aqueduct (Pl.II), bear witness to his facility with the compositional formulas of European landscape painting. He includes shepherds and cattle in the foreground, a small body of water framed by trees near the middle ground, and, in the distance, a mountain range that leads the eye into space. In the exactitude of its representation A Bit of the Roman Aqueduct embodies the much publicized advice to artists of Asher Brown Durand (1796-1886): "draw with scrupulous fidelity the outline or contour of such objects as you shall select. ... Every kind of tree has its traits of individuality ... with careful attention, these peculiarities are easily learned. (1)

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

Such meticulousness did not remain long in Inness's artistic vocabulary. Already possessing the instinct to paint more expressively than his American colleagues, Inness found that landscapes of the Barbizon school, which he first saw during trips to Paris in 1852 and 1853-1854, spurred his nascent desire to paint more freely and to feature more intimate subjects. In an interview in 1878, he recalled how impressed he had been during those early years with the works of Jean Baptiste Camille Corot (see Pl.IV), Charles Francois Daubigny (1817-1878), and Pierre Etienne Theodore Rousseau (1812-1867), singling them out as "among the very best" landscape painters. (2) Barbizon pictorial practices enliven Inness's The Huntsman (Pl. III), in which flecked, calligraphic brushstrokes capture the aura of mystery that veils the densely wooded clearing. The setting echoes Rousseau's in The Forest in Winter at Sunset (1845-1867; Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York City), and Inness's brushstrokes resemble those Corot used in his late masterpiece Ville-d'Avray (Pl. IV). True to the aesthetic principles of the Barbizon school, Inness ignored the representation integrity of his subjects allowed the bodies of the huntsman and his prey to trail off into the forest. He pursued the elusive suggestiveness that characterizes vibrant, capricious dialectics between light and shade deep within nature.

The approach to painting that Inness demonstrated so beautifully in The Huntsman and other works of the late 1850s and early 1860s became a central component of the much admired landscape he painted during the final fifteen years of his life. At the heart of this approach to painting was Inness's understanding of the aim of art, which was "not to instruct, not to edify, but to awaken an emotion. (3) The idea that a work of art could appeal to our deepest emotions resonated throughout Barbizon painting and greatly appealed to Inness.

In the 1860s Inness painted more suggestively, with more attention to conjuring emotional responses in his viewers than providing them with detailed information. His masterful Evening Landscape (Pl. V) remains one of the finest, most evocative paintings of this period. While not unfinished, it conveys many of the qualities that Inness explored in his later, unfinished works. Here, warm, lambent sunlight bathes a country road framed by towering trees. Two farmers return from a day of labor; one with a load of firewood on his back and the other with oxen pulling a cart. Neither the setting nor the activities comprise the chief interest, which is the expressive capacity of Inness's myriad brushstrokes: the lightly flecked strokes that produce ...

Related articles from newspapers, magazines, journals, and more
Roman aqueduct at caesarea israel
Picture from: Getty Images Image Source September 22, 2009 700+ words
Image Source Getty Images 09-22-2009 Roman aqueduct at caesarea israel Full Size JPG (258 KB) Roman aqueduct at caesarea israel Copyright (c) 2009 Getty Images
Roman Aqueduct, Segovia, Spain.
Picture from: NYPL Digital Gallery unknown January 1, 1934 700+ words
Roman Aqueduct, Nimes.
Picture from: NYPL Digital Gallery unknown January 1, 1934 700+ words
Roman aqueduct gets a face-lift.(Brief Article)
Magazine article from: Geographical CH November 1, 1999 700+ words
Work is currently underway to develop and protect the setting of the Pont du Gard, one of France's most extraordinary and best-preserved Roman remains. Built by Marcus Agrippa, son-in-law of the Emperor Augustus in 19BC the aqueduct once formed part of a 50-kilometre-system bringing water from the
GEORGE INNESS and the San Francisco art world in the 1890s.(painter)
Magazine article from: The Magazine Antiques HARRISON JR., ALFRED C. November 1, 2000 700+ words
George Inness (Fig. 1) was a leading American landscape...often repainted them--again and again. Inness visited California for about three months...also entitled In California), by George Inness, 1894. Signed and dated "G. Inness...
CASE SOLVED: Parts of 'lost' Inness painting united.(ARTS & CULTURE)
Newspaper article from: The Washington Times November 20, 2004 700+ words
...the Hudson River School artist George Inness, believed to have been destroyed more...and reassemble a sizable portion of the Inness painting, "The New Jerusalem." The...to the only multipart series painted by Inness," says Rachael Z. DeLue, assistant...
Case Solved: Parts of "Lost" Inness Painting United.
Magazine article from: World and I Dietsch, Deborah K. February 1, 2005 700+ words
...the Hudson River School artist George Inness, believed to have been destroyed more...and reassemble a sizable portion of the Inness painting, The New Jerusalem. The restored...to the only multipart series painted by Inness," says Rachael Z. DeLue, assistant...
Give a Painter His Due: Inness Deserves Top Honors.(Arts&Entertainment)
Newspaper article from: The New York Observer (New York, NY) December 1, 2003 700+ words
...standing does the landscape painter George Inness (1825-1894) have in the history of American art? As a student, I remember Inness occupying a marginal nook, his place...New Jersey, I began to wonder whether Inness was being shortchanged. A recent renovation...
For more facts and information, see all results
©2009 Gale, a part of Cengage Learning. All rights reserved.
About us | FAQs | Contact us | Privacy policy | Terms and conditions
Other Gale sites: Encyclopedia.com | HighBeam Research | Acquire Content | Books & Authors | Goliath | MovieRetriever | Smart QandA