URING the 19th century, in the United States of America, there came slowly
into existence a new school of painting—new often in temper rather than in
manner, for its followers usually came to Europe for their methods. Race,
climate, religion, commerce, social life, influence art, and the painters of the
United States reveal in their work all the characteristics for which their
country has long been famous: vivacity, invention, constant enterprise,oil paintings for sale, a
democratic enthusiasm, a love of truth (truth often united with romance or else
with sensationalism), and last, but not least, a rare felicity in transforming
borrowed knowledge into something quite original. It is not often that a
civilisation embodies itself in the genius of one man, giving an epitome of all
its dominant qualities; but in Mr. John S. Sargent, R.A., we recognise a painter
of tremendous gifts who does for the United States what the manly, swaggering
Rubens did for Flanders,oil paintings on canvas for sale, symbolising a people and a civilisation.
One sign of the democratic spirit in the progress of American Art is to be
noticed in the fact that women have participated largely in the honours gained
by the pioneers. It is noteworthy, for instance, that the first book on Women
Painters should have been written by an American lady, Mrs Ellet, as far back as
1859. Mrs. Ellet showed great industry, but following a custom rashly encouraged
by writers on art, she believed that she could teach painting and sculpture by
the use of words alone, in recording biographical facts,art oil paintings online, and in offering
criticisms on work that her readers could not see in illustrations. Written
history is the phonograph of all past centuries, but the understanding of art
owes little to its words.
Still, the enthusiasm that fired Mrs. Ellet was shared by many of her
countrywomen, and to it we owe some truly clever artists, like the four sculptors,
Harriet Hosmer, Florence Freeman, Edmonia Lewis and Emma Stebbins, or like the
following painters: Emily Sartain (portraits and genre), Sara M. Peale
(portraits), Mrs. J. W. Dewing (portraits,cheap oil paintings, subject pictures, flowers and
still-life), Annie C. Shaw (cattle and landscapes), Mrs. Adèle Fassett
(portraits) Mrs. Elisa Greatorex (landscapes), Mrs. Henry A. Loop (portraits),
Ella A. Moss (portraits), Jennie Brownscombe (subject pictures), May Alcott
(copies after J. M. W. Turner and still-life), Elizabeth Boott (figure
subjects), Charlotte B. Coman (landscapes in the manner of Corot), and that
delicate recorder of pleasant secrets learnt from nature in the fields, Fidelia
Bridges. The very titles of this lady's pictures have the fragrance of field
flowers or else they glow with the plumage of birds. It has been said of Fidelia
Bridges that her art sings little pastoral lyrics,modern abstract art oil painting, and her art is certainly very
fresh and sweet, charmed with much sympathetic appreciation of nature in some of
her unnumbered smiling moods. For Fidelia Bridges, like Birket Foster, paints as
though the year were all springtime, a series of twelve May months, all full of
gaiety and bounty. She seldom takes heed of that eternal warfare which
accompanies Nature's bountifulness, filling the seed-carrying winds with the
presence of death, and setting every living thing to prey upon another. To this
part of Nature's life Fidelia Bridges usually shuts her eyes, unlike Miss E. M.
Carpenter, whose landscape art reveals at times the menacing suggestion of great
rivers and of high solitary mountains. oil painted portraits
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