Mid-Atlantic Art: 20-21st
Century Northeast and Mid-Atlantic Painting (for years 1997-2000 includes
Southeast and Southern American Paintings)

Introduction
This section of the Traditional Fine Arts Organization (TFAO) catalogue Topics in American Art is devoted to the topic "Mid-Atlantic Art: 20-21st Century
Northeast and Mid-Atlantic Painting (for years 1997-2000 includes Southeast
and Southern American Paintings)." Articles and essays specific to
this topic published in TFAO's Resource
Library are listed at the beginning
of the section.
Following are links to valuable online
resources found outside our website. Links may be to museums' articles about
exhibits, plus much more topical information based on our online searches.
Following online resources is information
about offline resources including museums, DVDs, and paper-printed books,
journals and articles.

(above: Jervis McEntee (1828-1891).
Mount Desert Island, Maine, 1864, oil on canvas, John Wilmerding
Collection. Picture from National Gallery of Art (Washington, D.C.)
Source: Wikimedia Commons - public domain)
Articles and essays from Resource Library in chronological order:
2008-2016
2007
2006
2004- 2005
2003
2002
2001
2000
1999
1998
1997

(above: Late Summer in
Deerfield, MA, 2013. Photo by John Hazeltine)
From other websites:
Art and the New England Farm is
a 2018 exhibit at the Florence
Griswold Museum which says: "Drawing on the agricultural heritage
of Florence Griswold's family estate and of the Lyme region and beyond,
this exhibition examines the history and character of New England's farms
in works by artists from the 19th to the 21st century." Accessed
6/18
Flora/Fauna: The Naturalist Impulse in American Art is a 2017 exhibit at the Florence Griswold Museum which
says: "Drawn extensively from the Museum's collection, as well as many
public and private lenders, the 101 works in Flora/Fauna survey
the history of environmentally-conscious artists in the United States from
the dawn of the 19th century through the mid-20th century." Also
see 6/20/17 article in Antiques
and The Arts Weekly Accessed 8/17
Pastoral Vermont: The Paintings and Etchings of Luigi Lucioni, an exhibit held May 21-August 9, 2009
at the Middlebury College Museum of Art.
Includes 10 audio files. Accessed February, 2015.

(above: N. C. Wyeth, Smokey
Face, 1917, oil on canvas, 32 1/4 ? 40 inches, Brigham Young University
Museum of Art. Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons*)
DVD/VHS videos:
- Hudson River and its Painters, The is a 57 minute 1988 video from the Metropolitan Museum of
Art Series released by Home Vision Entertainment. The mid-nineteenth
century saw the growth of America's first native school of landscape painters,
artists inspired by the compelling beauty of the Hudson River Valley, who
portrayed this and other romantic wilderness areas with an almost mystical
reverence. This 57 minute video explores the life and work of the major
artists of what came to be known as the Hudson River School -- Thomas Cole,
Asher Durand, Frederic Church, Albert Bierstadt, John Kensett, Jasper Cropsey,
Worthington Whittredge, Sanford Gifford, and George Inness. Although its
members traveled widely, the growth and development of the school were
centered around New York City, and its success reflected the ambitions
of the youthful American nation. It presents more than 200 paintings, prints
and photographs of the period and juxtaposes them with dramatic location
photography of the Hudson River area. The Hudson Company in association
with The Metropolitan Museum of Art. Hudson River and its Painters,
The is available through the Sullivan
Video Library at The Speed Art Museum which holds a sizable collection
of art-related videos available to educators at no charge.
-
- Plein Air:
Painting the American Landscape episodes take
the viewer on a journey, from Cape Cod, where the Atlantic meets the land,
to the peak
of Denali, the "Great One,"
North America's tallest mountain. Other episodes feature the Tongass Rain
Forest; Seward, Alaska; Taos, New Mexico; Trinidad, Colorado; and central
Michigan.
-
- Plein air artists featured in the series include Matt
Smith of Scottsdale, Arizona; Kenn Backhaus of Robesonia, Pennsylvania;
Jean LeGassick of Silver City, Nevada; Connecticut artist Charles Sovek;
Utah artist Ron Rencher; and Frank LaLumia of Trinidad, Colorado. Episodes
features one or two of the contemporary plein air painters and examine
their technique plus history of the plein air genre. Plein Air: Painting
the American Landscape appeals to art lovers and outdoor enthusiasts
alike and helps viewers to understand America's own naturalist art form.
-
- For more than a century, a unique group of American artists
ventured out of their studios to capture the essence of the American landscape.
Some learned their craft from the French Impressionists, others through
trial and error. What unites them is their dedication to the interplay
of land, water and sky, and the study of how light, shadow and color form
the varied and rich masks of the natural world.
-
- This six-part series premiered in August 2007 on PBS
and was presented in high definition. Underwriters for the series are Rasmuson
Foundation and Joan Irvine Smith & Athalie R. Clarke Foundation. The
producer is Greg Bombeck of Bombeck Productions and the PBS presenter is
KTOO Juneau. DVDs are available through Bombeck Productions, LLC, 18016
Kamkoff Ave., P.O. Box 770302, Eagle River, AK 99577
-
- Portrait of George Hardy.
In this 30 minute Gabriel Coakley 1995 program we meet George Hardy, an
elderly self-taught artist, living on the island of Deer Isle, Maine. Born
on Deer Isle in 1917, Hardy has continued to live there ever since. After
making a living as a mason, he began his career in folk art at the age
of 60. Isolated from art trends, with no formal training and only a seventh-grade
education, his work is concrete, raw, and direct. His sculpture is very
much a part of his environment. From his roughened hands come the energized
versions of wooden porcupines, tigers, red foxes with alligator teeth,
blue howling coyotes, seagulls, and song birds.
-

(above, William Aiken Walker, Cotton
Wagon, 1893, oil on canvas, 12 x 20 inches, Private Collection,
Australia. Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons*)
TFAO catalogues:
*Tag for expired US copyright of object
image:

Links to sources of information outside
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on evaluating web pages see TFAO's General
Resources section in Online
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