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May Night: Willard Metcalf at Old Lyme To Open |
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Willard L. Metcalf, May Night, 1906. Corcoran Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C.
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OLD LYME, CT.- The profound impact of Willard Leroy Metcalf (1858-1925) on the course of the Lyme Art Colony, Americas center of Impressionism, has never been extensively chronicled. The exhibition "May Night: Willard Metcalf at Old Lyme," on view at the Florence Griswold Museum from May 1 through September 11, 2005, brings the artists achievements at last to light. Based on new scholarship, the exhibition and accompanying catalogue trace Metcalfs frequent visits to Florence Griswolds boarding house in Old Lyme, Connecticut between 1905 and 1907 and examine the pivotal role of these experiences to his growing reputation as one of Americas preeminent landscape painters.
The Florence Griswold Museum is home to the largest public collection of artifacts relating to Willard Metcalf, with objects ranging from oil paintings, pastels, and silverpoints to sketchbooks, a diary, and even a cabinet of curiosities gathered by the artist during the course of his prolific career. The exhibition "May Night" emphasizes these holdings as well as loans from distinguished private collections and public institutions such as the Corcoran Gallery of Art and Smithsonian American Art Museum, both in Washington, D.C., and the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston. In an unprecedented synthesis of Metcalfs greatest loves art and the natural world - over 40 plein-air paintings are exhibited alongside the artists collections of meticulously labeled birds eggs and nests, moths, and butterflies.
Summers in Old Lyme - Metcalf arrived in Old Lyme in May of 1905, invited by friend and fellow artist Childe Hassam (1859-1935). He was quickly taken with the beauty of the area, the companionship of the other artists, and the charm of Miss Florence who single-handedly managed the boisterous group at her boarding house along the banks of the Lieutenant River. Dr. Bruce Chambers, author of the lead essay for the catalogue, notes that this was the most pivotal period of Metcalfs career, and adds that, neither his own painting nor American Impressionism would ever be quite the same again. Over the next three summers at Old Lyme Metcalf would produce many of his most important works and develop the artistic philosophy for which he would become best known. Forget your theories, he told one of his fellow artists. Always paint what you see. Rather than adopting a uniform style, Metcalf allowed his subject matter to determine his technique. His works from this period display an impressive variety of approaches, ranging from the refined and delicate to the expressive and robust, each shift in brushwork and texture calculated to elicit specific effects of light, atmosphere, and mood. In "The First Snow (No. 2)" (1906, Museum of Fine Arts, Boston), for example, the fallen flakes are seemingly held in place by Metcalfs steady hand. Smooth passages of oil paint trace the curves of each newly formed drift and readily portray the intensity of Metcalfs vision. On the other hand, "The Poppy Garden" (1905, The Manoogian Collection, Detroit), Metcalfs most obvious tribute to Claude Monet (1840-1926) and French Impressionism, presents a very different landscape. The field is alive with dancing colors, which are rendered in brilliant daubs and dashes by Metcalfs now energetic brush.
"May Night": The Artists Most Celebrated Painting
The landscapes Metcalf created at Old Lyme won him national recognition, and provided the impetus for his subsequent reputation as a major presence in contemporary American art. The painting of the exhibitions title, "May Night" (1906, Corcoran Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C.), refers to the title of a moonlit view of the Griswold House. In 1907, this picture, along with two other Old Lyme paintings, was accepted into the inaugural exhibition of contemporary American paintings at the Corcoran Gallery of Art. "May Night" was awarded a gold medal and the Clark Prize of $1,000, and the Corcoran purchased the painting for the then spectacular price of $3,000. Now, nearly a century after it was painted, "May Night" comes home to the Florence Griswold Museum. The Corcoran Gallery of Art is pleased to participate in this very important exhibition of Metcalfs work by lending 'May Night', the artists most celebrated work, explains Sarah Cash, Bechhoefer Curator of American Art at the Corcoran. She adds, It is only appropriate that this pivotal painting returns to the site that inspired it, and that played such a significant role in Metcalfs development as an artist.
A Reverence for Nature - Just as Metcalfs artistic spirit flourished in Old Lyme, his interest in collecting birds eggs and nests found new zeal there as well. Song Sparrow, Lyme May 20, 05, nest found in brush heap, documents his first visit to Old Lyme. The Florence Griswold Museum now houses this early acquisition and, indeed, Metcalfs entire naturalist collection. This extraordinary group of objects includes the eggs of hundreds of bird species, several dozen nests, and an impressive number of mounted moths and butterflies, as well as the wooden cabinet with twenty-eight drawers that the artist bought to store them in. This collection will be shown publicly for the first time in a section of the exhibition devoted to Metcalfs activities as a keen observer of the natural world. The Griswold Museum has worked closely with curators of the Peabody Museum of Natural History at Yale to better understand the historical context of this practice, the significance of Metcalfs own skills as a naturalist, and how they relate to his art. Metcalfs great love of the outdoors, and in particular his enthusiasm for fishing, is evident in several paintings in this exhibition, "The Trout Brook (No.1)", (1907, Currier Gallery of Art, New Hampshire) among them. Here, the artist/angler is able to suggest that beneath every carefully recorded ripple of water, there is the promise of a fishs bite.
Metcalf and Artists Colonies - As a young man Metcalf visited many of Europes thriving artist colonies. In addition to Walberswick, in England and Grez-sur-Loing, in France, Metcalf was among the first American artists to visit Giverny, the renowned French village in which Claude Monet lived and worked. Interestingly, Metcalfs initial reason for going to Giverny may have been to collect and study eggs instead of to paint: rather than tutoring two of Monets children in art, he taught them about botany and ornithology. Whatever his intentions, Metcalf returned to Giverny for two more summers, experimenting with but never wholeheartedly adopting the high horizons, abrupt cropping, and multiple diagonals of French Impressionism. For example, Metcalfs "Giverny" (1887, University of Kentucky Art Museum), a wooded landscape marked by brilliant sunlight and deep shadows, illustrates that Metcalf didnt embrace the broken brushwork or the chromatically divided application of paint favored by Monet and others of his followers. Rather, he continued to live by his self-imposed doctrine: Paint what you see.
Metcalfs experiences at Giverny and other colonies abroad, while they did not transform him as an artist, provided the precedent and model for Metcalfs involvement with Old Lyme. This thriving New England colony was often referred to as the American Giverny and Metcalf as one of its leading lights. "May Night: Willard Metcalf at Old Lyme" is the first museum exhibition to look at Metcalfs Old Lyme paintings in depth and to place them in the context of his wide-ranging career. The exhibition is supported by a grant from the National Endowment for the Arts.
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