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Carnegie Museum of Art’s first drawing collection spotlights the many functions of drawings and the museum’s early collecting trends
Masters of American Drawings and Watercolors
Foundations of the Collection, 1904–1922
May 30, 2007
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania…The first grouping of important American drawings and watercolors acquired by Carnegie Museum of Art will be featured in the exhibition Masters of American Drawings and Watercolors, Foundations of the Collection, 1904–1922, on view in the museum’s Works on Paper gallery June 23–October 7, 2007. In addition to offering an intimate look at the masterful work of American artists including Winslow Homer, James McNeill Whistler, Frederick Childe Hassam, Cecilia Beaux, John La Farge, Maxfield Parrish, Kenyon Cox, and William James Glackens, the exhibition of 75 drawings and watercolors provides insight into the tastes and major trends in American art during the time that the works were purchased. It also educates viewers on Carnegie Museum of Art’s institutional history and the museum’s foundation collection.
John W. Beatty, who served as Carnegie Museum of Art’s first director from 1896 to 1922, was the driving force behind the acquisition of nearly 200 drawings and watercolors by an array of prominent American artists of the period. With the end of Beatty’s tenure as director in 1922, the museum’s collecting focus shifted and the acquisitions of drawings and watercolors ceased for more than 30 years. When Gordon Bailey Washburn became director, he resumed the active purchase of American drawings and watercolors.
“By and large these are virtuoso works,” says Amanda Zehnder, Carnegie Museum of Art assistant curator of fine arts and curator of the exhibition. “Some of them are really amazing. The hand of the artist—his or her thought processes really come through.”
The early collection of American drawings and watercolors has significant resonance with the early history of the Carnegie International, the survey exhibition of contemporary art that began in 1896 and continues to the present day. Many of the artists in the collection participated as Carnegie International artists or as members of the exhibition’s jury or advisory committee. Winslow Homer’s painting The Wreck (1896), which appeared in the first Carnegie International, was the first painting acquired by the museum for its collection.
His charcoal drawing Figures on the Coast (1883) was the first drawing acquired by the museum for its collection in 1904.
An artist himself, Beatty was devoted to building a collection that showed the many functions of drawings. He was also interested in the access that the medium offered to an artist’s thought and working processes. Included in the exhibition, for example, are works that are studies for subsequent works. Common categories of the early drawings collection include works made in preparation for decorative schemes or murals, paintings, or publication illustrations. There are also numerous drawings that stand on their own and focus on such themes as landscape, figure studies, and genre scenes. A graphite, sepia, and ink on canvas work by Kenyon Cox, accompanied by numerous drawings on paper, served as scale drawings for the Contemplative Spirit of the East mural for the Minnesota State Capitol. John La Farge’s First Sketch for Three-Paneled Window, One Done in Color (1896) is a preparatory work for a memorial stained glass window project.
An important pastel and chalk drawing by Whistler titled Mrs. Leyland Seated was a study for a dress that he designed. The dress was then worn by Frances Leyland and is featured in one of Whistler’s greatest portraits, Symphony in Flesh Colour and Pink: Portrait of Mrs.Frances Leyland, 1871–1874, which is now housed in the Frick Collection, New York. Works by artists such as Winslow Homer, Howard Pyle, Jessie Wilcox Smith and Violet Oakley and many more demonstrate the strong tradition of book and newspaper illustration in evidence throughout the early collection. In addition to those works that functioned as studies, the exhibition will also highlight the other end of the spectrum when it comes to works on paper: highly finished, autonomous watercolors, pastels, and drawings.
The elegant works seen in the early drawings collection often represented restrained aesthetic trends compared with some of the more radical, avant-garde trends in the art world of the same period. Naturalism, aestheticism, and academic art are dominant trends seen among the artists of the early drawings and watercolors collection. Beatty, who studied painting at the Royal Academy in Munich in the 1870s, believed in the academic tradition of technical skill and delicately evoked mood. He and his advisor, art critic and art historian Sadakichi Hartmann, selected works for the museum based for the most part on the works of living artists, mostly American, in line with Andrew Carnegie’s maxim to build a collection on the “old masters of tomorrow.”
Summer drawing classes and programs
For information or to register, call 412.622.3288
ACT 48 hours available for K-12 educators.
Lunch & Learn
Early 20th-Century Masters of American Drawings and Watercolors at Carnegie Museum of Art and the Westmoreland Museum of American Art
Thurs., June 28
9:00 a.m.–2:30 p.m.
$48/$58. Lunch in the Carnegie Café included.
Two great collections of American watercolors and drawings featuring works by Winslow Homer, James McNeill Whistler, Childe Hassam, and other leading artists of the period are featured in this day’s activity. The first part of the day is spent at Westmoreland Museum of American Art where Director Judith O'Toole offers an intimate look at original works pulled together specially for this program with Curator Barbara Jones. Following lunch at the Carnegie Café, participants will tour the exhibition Masters of American Drawings and Watercolors. Many of the works were acquired directly from the artists by the museum’s first director, John W. Beatty. Bus transportation is included from Carnegie Museum of Art.
The Care and Conservation of Drawings, Watercolors, and Prints
Thurs., July 19
10:30 a.m.–2:00 p.m.
$35/$44. Lunch in the Carnegie Café included.
Drawings, watercolors, and prints—works of art produced on paper—require special display, care, and conservation. Ellen Baxter, Carnegie Museum of Art’s chief conservator, and her staff will give a presentation on the materials and environments needed to display and preserve works on paper. The discussion will be continued over lunch with the conservators.
Drawing and Watercolor Classes
Being There: Creating a Sense of Place through Drawing
Wed., July 18, 10 a.m.–4:00 p.m.
$65 members/$78 nonmembers, includes studio reception
Douglas Cooper, muralist, and Andrew Mellon Professor at Carnegie Mellon’s School of Architecture, leads this daylong drawing excursion. It starts in the museum’s Hall of Architecture with sketching projects focusing on light and shadow, volume, and effective use of detail. Later it moves on to the South Side where, weather permitting, students will work outdoors drawing the city and its slopes. The day wraps up with a glass of wine at Cooper’s South Side studio. Participants are asked to bring a bag lunch.
I Can’t Draw
Sun., July 8–Aug. 5, 1:00–4:00 p.m.
$60 members/$75 nonmembers
With supportive step-by-step instruction, first-timers learn drawing fundamentals and build confidence as they explore materials and techniques.
Draw What You See!
Thurs., July 12–Aug. 30, 6:00–9:00 p.m.
$72 members/$90 nonmembers
This structured course teaches students how to see more accurately while trying new drawing methods. Ideal for beginners or individuals who wish to break out of old drawing patterns.
Drawing the Figure
Fri., July 13–Aug. 31, 10:00 a.m.–noon
$114 members/$144 nonmembers
Students learn techniques to represent the three- dimensional human form in two-dimensions. They will work in a variety of media—charcoal, pastel, oil, or acrylic paint—while viewing a series of short and long poses of the clothed, draped, or undraped model.
Painting in Watercolor
Tues, July 10–July 31, 10:00 a.m.–2:00 p.m.
$64 members/$80 nonmembers
Novice and experienced artists get firsthand guidance in brushwork and paint techniques to convey light, spontaneity, and atmosphere in still life, figure, and landscape paintings. Special visits to the Masters of American Drawings and Watercolors exhibition will be scheduled during the class sessions.
From Drawing to Painting
Tues., July 10–July 31, 6:00–9:00 p.m.
$48 members/$60 nonmembers
Students begin with the basics of drawing, including proportion, line, and value to strengthen their process of seeing. Then they will translate their drawings into paintings with instruction in color mixing, paint application, and self-expression while depicting a variety of subjects.
Watercolor Workshop: Bringing the Landscape into the Studio
Wed., July 18–Aug., 8, 10:00 a.m.–2:00 p.m.
$64 members/$80 nonmembers
Students explore realistic and abstract approaches to depicting landscapes in watercolor. Through weekly discussions and critiques of work produced outside of class, from take-home exercises, and visits to Masters of American Drawings and Watercolors, they will learn to transform what they see into exciting compositions. One session takes place at Frick Art and Historical Center for a day of painting outdoor garden landscapes.
Members-Only Tour
Members can enjoy free docent-led gallery tours on the second Sunday of each month, 1:00–2:00 p.m. Themes change monthly and a two-week advance reservation is required. For information, call 412.578.2476.
Masters of American Drawings and Watercolors: Foundations of the Collection
July 8, 1:00–2:00 p.m.
This special tour of the Masters of American Drawings and Watercolors exhibition compares the work of Whistler, Homer, Hassam, and several other artists to their paintings in the museum’s permanent collection.
Support
General support for the museum’s exhibition program is provided by The Heinz Endowments, the Pennsylvania Council on the Arts, and Allegheny Regional Asset District.
Images are available on the museum's media photo web site. Contact the
communications office at 412.688.8690 or
stitelert@carnegiemuseums.org for the access code.
Carnegie Museum of Art
Located at 4400 Forbes Avenue in the Oakland section of Pittsburgh and founded
by industrialist and philanthropist Andrew Carnegie in 1895, Carnegie Museum of
Art is nationally and internationally recognized for its distinguished
collection of American and European works from the 16th century to the present.
The Heinz Architectural Center, part of Carnegie Museum of Art, is dedicated to
the collection, study, and exhibition of architectural drawings and models. For
more information about Carnegie Museum of Art, call 412.622.3131.
Contact:
Tey Stiteler
412.688.8690
stitelert@carnegiemuseums.org
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