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Cultivating America: Visions of the Landscape in Twentieth-Century Prints

Exhibition Info
Courtesy D. Wigmore Fine Art, Inc. and the Georges Schreiber Estate. © Michael C. Carlos Museum ...
Cultivating America: Visions of the Landscape in Twentieth-Century PrintsSaturday, March 8, 2008 - Sunday, June 29, 2008

In the years between the two world wars, as America sought to establish a separate identity from Europe, critics called for a truly “American” art to be born. This art was to be democratic in spirit—accessible to all—and, thus, realist in style (as opposed to the abstraction of the European avant-garde) and distinctly American in subject matter. The artistic movement that arose in response to this call came to be known as the “American Scene.” Within the American Scene another movement, “Regionalism,” developed that focused on rural views often tinged with nostalgia for the pre-industrial past. Portrayals of the landscape helped twentieth-century Americans understand and identify with the past conquest of the frontier and solidified the idea of an American spirit rooted in the soil.

The artists in this exhibition all shared an interest in the land and the people who lived and worked upon it, yet their landscapes have many faces. The works of Albert Winslow Barker and Jac Young portray an idyllic, nurturing countryside. For others, nature is a powerful force that threatens to overwhelm the human endeavors, as it does in the brewing storm of Peppino Mangravite’s lithograph. It was also a powerful metaphor for the wartime experiences of Americans, as Marguerite Kumm and Prentiss Taylor demonstrate. Thomas Hart Benton sought to articulate the spirit of the people in the land by devoting himself to depictions of American laborers. Other artists, like John Costigan, chose a more nostalgic and personal view to express the hope that the hardships of the Depression would pass and prosperity would return. Seascapes, as in the works by Barker, Leo John Meissner, and Lawrence Wilbur, also contributed to the overall vision of the American environment.

The Great Depression, of course, made existence for both artists and their subjects increasingly difficult. Government programs were developed to combat the high unemployment rate, hiring artists to create government posters, decorate government buildings, and establish community art centers. A 1939 Works Progress Administration (WPA) exhibition catalogue spoke in agricultural terms of American artists who were “fertilizing the best elements of our heritage” and halting the erosion that threatened “to deprive large sections of America of its cultural top-soil.”

Capitalizing on the government’s promotion of American art and artists during the Depression, the American Artists Group (AAG) and Associated American Artists (AAA) were both founded as private business ventures in 1934. Trying to make a profit and provide a livelihood for artists in dire economic times, these companies marketed art to the public in a radical new way. The message of their advertising was clear: the relative affordability and multiple copies of prints made them democratic, and these particular prints were especially American in style, subject, and spirit. Before the waning of their popularity in the early 1950s, Regionalist and American Scene artists and their art would become household names, and a part of the American tradition.

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© Estate of Dr. Albert Winslow Barker. Image courtesy of the Michael C. Carlos Museum, Emory Un ...
Albert Winslow Barker
ca. 1928
© Estate of Dr. Albert Winslow Barker.  Photo © Bruce M. White, 2008.
Albert Winslow Barker
1931
© Estate of Eloise Howard. Image courtesy of the Michael C. Carlos Museum, Emory University.  P ...
Eloise Howard
1936
© Estate of Asa Cheffetz. Image courtesy of the Michael C. Carlos Museum, Emory University.  Ph ...
Asa Cheffetz
1935
© Latham Family Educational Trust. Image courtesy of the Michael C. Carlos Museum, Emory Univer ...
Barbara Latham
1936
© Estate of John E. Costigan. Image courtesy of the Michael C. Carlos Museum, Emory University. ...
John E. Costigan
ca. 1940
© Estate of Marguerite Kumm. Image courtesy of the Michael C. Carlos Museum, Emory University.  ...
Marguerite Kumm
ca.1943
© Estate of Julius J. Lankes. Image courtesy of the Michael C. Carlos Museum, Emory University. ...
J. J. Lankes
1937
Courtesy D. Wigmore Fine Art, Inc. and the Georges Schreiber Estate. © Michael C. Carlos Museum ...
Georges Schreiber
ca. 1942
Art © Benton Testamentary Trusts/UMB Bank Trustee/Licensed by VAGA, New York, NY.  Image courte ...
Thomas Hart Benton
1943
© Estate of Leo John Meissner. Image courtesy of the Michael C. Carlos Museum, Emory University ...
Leo Meissner
1936
© Estate of Dr. Albert Winslow Barker. Image courtesy of the Michael C. Carlos Museum, Emory Un ...
Albert Winslow Barker
1930
© Estate of Dr. Albert Winslow Barker. Image courtesy of the Michael C. Carlos Museum, Emory Un ...
Albert Winslow Barker
1936
© Estate of Peppino Mangravite. Image courtesy of the Michael C. Carlos Museum, Emory Universit ...
Peppino Mangravite
ca. 1939
© Estate of Prentiss Hottel Taylor. Image courtesy of the Michael C. Carlos Museum, Emory Unive ...
Prentiss Taylor
1943
© Estate of Asa Cheffetz. Image courtesy of the Michael C. Carlos Museum, Emory University.  Ph ...
Asa Cheffetz
1941
© Estate of Charles Jacob Young. Image courtesy of the Michael C. Carlos Museum, Emory Universi ...
C. Jac Young
1935
© Estate of Dr. Albert Winslow Barker. Image courtesy of the Michael C. Carlos Museum, Emory Un ...
Albert Winslow Barker
1930