2017年3月1日星期三

Italian Landscape Washington Allston 1814


Italian Landscape
Washington Allston 1814
From the collection of
The Toledo Museum of Art
Details
Title: Italian Landscape
Creator: Washington Allston
Date Created: 1814
Location Created: North America
Physical Dimensions: w1830 x h1118 cm (Complete)
Catalogue entry: English Romantic poet Samuel Taylor Coleridge (1772-1834) wrote of his friend, American artist Washington Allston, "he was gifted with an artistic and poetic genius unsurpassed by any man of his age." Not only a painter, Allston designed sculpture and architecture, wrote artistic theory, essays, poetry, and even a novel. Born in South Carolina and educated at Harvard, Allston spent most of his career in Boston, with the exception of two extended periods in Europe in 1801-1808 and 1811-1818, which included four years in Rome (where he met Coleridge) and several years in England. It was in England, at the height of his career, that he painted Italian Landscape in 1814. Like Coleridge, Allston's sensibilities aligned with the Romantics, who gave preference to emotion, faith, and spirituality over rational intellect. They also idealized the freedom of Nature in contrast to the constraints of culture. In this painting, Allston depicts an imaginary Italian landscape in which humanity and nature have grown together into a harmony where past and present coexist. A combination of scenes and events that he witnessed during his stay in Italy is arranged according to his memory and imagination and filtered through the experiences of his own life. The rustic figures contemplating a fountain may suggest an allegory of life (the overflowing water) and death (the sarcophagus shape of the fountain) played out against a backdrop of ancient ruins, a walled medieval city, and a Vesuvius-like mountain in the distance. As in all of his landscapes, Allston imbues the painting with silence, light, mystery, and beauty.
Type: Painting
Rights: Purchased with funds from the Florence Scott Libbey Bequest in Memory of her Father, Maurice A. Scott
External Link: http://classes.toledomuseum.org:8080/emuseum/view/objects/asitem/121/17
Medium: Oil on canvas

The Toledo Museum of Art
Toledo, United States

Since our founding in 1901, the Toledo Museum of Art has earned a global reputation for the quality of our collection, our innovative and extensive education programs, and our architecturally significant campus.

More than 30,000 works of art represent American and European painting, the history of art in glass, ancient Greek, Roman, and Egyptian works, Asian and African art, medieval art, sculpture, decorative arts, graphic arts, and modern and contemporary art.

To accommodate the ever growing collection and demand for art education, the Museum campus has grown exponentially since its founding. From its humble first exhibition space in two rented rooms, the Museum has grown to cover approximately 36 acres with six buildings.

The main Museum building interior contains four and a half acres of floor space on two levels. It has 45 galleries, 15 classroom studios, the 1,750-seat Peristyle concert hall, the 176-seat Little Theater lecture hall, the Resource Center for Educators, the Family Center, the Visual Resources Collection, the Museum Cafe, and the Museum Store featuring Collectors Corner.

The Glass Pavilion has five galleries, a glass study room, classrooms, two hotshops, a multipurpose GlasSalon, public and private courtyard space, and a coffee bar.

Thanks to the benevolence of its founders, as well as the continued support of its members, the Toledo Museum of Art remains a privately-endowed, non-profit institution and opens its collection to the public free of charge six days a week, 309 days a year. We are closed on Mondays and major holidays.

Washington Allston
Nov 5, 1779 - Jul 9, 1843

Washington Allston was an American painter and poet, born in Waccamaw Parish, South Carolina. Allston pioneered America's Romantic movement of landscape painting. He was well known during his lifetime for his experiments with dramatic subject matter and his bold use of light and atmospheric color.
http://hisour.com/art-medium/paintings/italian-landscape-washington-allston-1814/

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