GLEN FALLS, NY.- The
Hyde Collections newest exhibition, Thomas Chambers (1808 1869): American Marine and Landscape Painter, is the first survey seeking to define the artists style, sources, and the audience for his mid-nineteenth-century landscape and marine paintings.
Many of English-born Chambers paintings from his first thirty years in the United States depict New York and Massachusetts landscapes, as well as marine-related subjects. Chambers has been celebrated as an American folk painter whose style anticipated the modern American taste for contour, lively pattern, and strength of color.
The exhibition, which opens to the public on Saturday, February 7 and runs through Sunday, April 19, 2009, includes fifty-four works from private and public U.S. collections. Forty-five paintings are by Chambers himself and these are complemented by related works of his contemporaries.
The Hyde is thrilled to be presenting the Chambers exhibition as New York State celebrates the quadracentennial of New Yorks founding by Henry Hudson, said Museum Executive Director David F. Setford. Thomas Chambers lived in Albany from 1852 to1857 and painted many scenes of the Hudson River and Lake George, several of which will be featured in this exhibition.
The exhibition is organized by the Philadelphia Museum of Art and its Center for American Art, in association with the Indiana University Art Museum, and is curated by Kathleen A. Foster, The Robert L. McNeil, Jr., Senior Curator of American Art and Director of the Center for American Art. It was supported by a generous gift from Mr. and Mrs. William C. Buck.
The Hyde Collection is the second stop for this traveling exhibition, which first appeared at the Philadelphia Museum of Art in fall of 2008. Following its display in Glens Falls, the exhibition will be on view in 2010 at the American Folk Art Museum in New York City and the Indiana University Art Museum in Bloomington, Indiana.
The curator of Thomas Chambers (1808-1869): American Marine and Landscape Painter, Kathleen A. Foster of the Philadelphia Museum of Art, will speak at the exhibitions closing reception at The Hyde on Sunday, April 19, 2009. Sponsors of the exhibition at The Hyde Collection are SCA Tissue and NBT Bank.