Luminism (American art style)
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Luminism is a style of American landscape painting of the 1850s to 1870s, characterized by effects of light in a landscape, through the use of aerial perspective and the concealing of visible brushstrokes. Luminist landscapes emphasize tranquility, often depicting calm, reflective water and a soft, hazy sky. Artists who were most central to the development of the luminist style include Fitz Henry Lane, Martin Johnson Heade, Sanford Gifford, and John F. Kensett.[1] Painters with a less clear affiliation include Frederic Edwin Church, Jasper Cropsey, Albert Bierstadt, Worthington Whittredge, Raymond Dabb Yelland, Alfred Thompson Bricher, James Augustus Suydam, and David Johnson.[2] Some precursor artists are George Harvey and Robert Salmon.[3] Joseph Rusling Meeker also worked in the style.[4]
History
[edit]The term luminism was introduced by mid-20th-century art historians to describe a 19th-century American style of painting that developed as an offshoot of the Hudson River School. The historian John I. H. Baur identified the style in the late 1940s, calling it "luminism" in a 1954 article.[5] The National Gallery of Art's landmark 1980 exhibition American Light: The Luminist Movement, 1825-1875 included many artists now primarily associated with the Hudson River School, such as Frederic Edwin Church.[6]
As defined by art historian Barbara Novak, luminist art tends to stress the horizontal, and demonstrates the artist's close control of structure, tone, and light. The light is generally cool, hard, and non-diffuse; "soft, atmospheric, painterly light is not luminist light". Brushstrokes are concealed to minimize recognition that the painting is an artefact. Luminist paintings tend not to be large to suggest a sense of timeless intimacy. The picture surface or plane is emphasized, recalling primitivism. These qualities are present in different degrees depending on the artist’s work. Novak suggests that luminism is most closely associated with transcendentalism. The difficulty of precisely defining luminism has contributed to over-use of the term.[7]
Luminism shares an emphasis on the effects of light with Impressionism. However, the two styles are markedly different. Luminism is characterized by attention to detail and the hiding of brushstrokes, while impressionism is characterized by lack of detail and an emphasis on brushstrokes. Luminism preceded impressionism, and the artists who painted in a luminist style were in no way influenced by Impressionism.
Luminism may also represent a contemplative perception of nature. According to Earl E. Powell, this is particularly visible in paintings by John Frederick Kensett, who shifted the visual concern for landscape to an interest in quietism, making pictures of mood that depict a poetic experience of nature. Furthermore, his painting Shrewsbury River “reduces nature to cryptographic essentials of composition . . . while rarified veils of light, color, and atmosphere reflected in water offer an experience of silence", a description akin to the sublime.[8][9][10] Similarly, Martin Johnson Heade's painting Thunder Storm on Narragansett Bay represents the greatness of nature and the sublime arising from an intimate engagement with nature.[11]
The artists who painted in this style did not refer to their own work as "luminism", nor did they articulate any common aesthetic philosophy beyond the principles of the Hudson River School. Many art historians find the term "luminism" problematic. J. Gray Sweeney argues that "the origins of luminism as an art-historical term were deeply entwined with the interests of elite collectors, prominent art dealers, influential curators, art historians, and constructions of national identity during the Cold War."[12] Alan Wallach has called for a wholesale rethinking of "luminism" as a historical phenomenon.[13]
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Martin Johnson Heade, Thunder Storm on Narragansett Bay, 1868
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View of the Shrewsbury River, an 1859 luminist painting by John Frederick Kensett
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Communion, oil and metal leaf on panel, by Steven DaLuz (2017?)
Contemporary luminism or Neoluminism
[edit]Characteristics of luminism – such as majestic skies, calm waters, rarefied light, and magnificent landscapes also appear in contemporary American painting.[14]in artists like James Doolin, April Gornik. and Steven DaLuz.[15][16][17] The influence of luminism can be seen in the works of several American experimental filmmakers including James Benning and Sharon Lockhart, particularly in Benning's Ten Skies (2004) and Lockhart's Double Tide (2009).[18]
Citations
[edit]- ^ Wilmerding, 108
- ^ Wilmerding, 18, 108, 120-121, 134
- ^ Wilmerding, 14
- ^ Kemp, J.R. (2016). Expressions of Place: The Contemporary Louisiana Landscape. University Press of Mississippi. p. 26. ISBN 978-1-4968-0826-4. Retrieved 2023-06-08.
- ^ Wilmerding, 12
- ^ Kelly, Franklin (1989). Frederic Edwin Church (PDF). Washington: National Gallery of Art. p. 14. ISBN 0-89468-136-2.
- ^ Barbara Novak, "On Defining Luminism", in Wilmerding, 23–29
- ^ O'Neill, John P., ed. (1990). Barnett Newman: selected writings and interviews (1. paperback printing ed.). Berkeley, Calif.: University of California Press. pp. 170–173. ISBN 978-0520078178.
- ^ Wilmerding, 69–92
- ^ Sweeney, J. Gray (January 1988). "A 'Very Peculiar' Picture: Martin J. Heade's Thunderstorm over Narragansett Bay". Archives of American Art Journal. 28 (4): 2–14. doi:10.1086/aaa.28.4.1557614. JSTOR 2712898. S2CID 191802468.
- ^ Guardiano, Nicholas. "An 'American Sublime' in Nineteenth-Century American Art and Philosophy" (PDF). liberalarts.iupui.edu. Retrieved Oct 18, 2016.
- ^ J. Gray Sweeney, "Inventing Luminism: 'Labels are the Dickens'", Oxford Art Journal 26, no. 2 (2003), p. 93.
- ^ Alan Wallach, "Rethinking 'Luminism': Taste, Class, and Aestheticizing Tendencies in Mid-Nineteenth-Century American Landscape Painting", in Nancy Siegel ed., The Cultured Canvas: New Perspectives on American Landscape Painting (Dartmouth: University of New England Press, 2011), pp. 115–147
- ^ Bell, Julian (January 2013). Contemporary Art and the Sublime. Tate. ISBN 9781849763875. Retrieved Oct 18, 2016.
- ^ Bruce, Chris; West, Harvey (1985). Sources of Light: Contemporary American Luminism, Martha Alf, Roger Brown, April Gornik, Alfred Leslie, Norman Lundin, Ed Paschke. Seattle, Wash.: The Gallery. ISBN 978-0935558135. Retrieved Oct 18, 2016.
- ^ "Steven Daluz". Artodyssey. Archived from the original on Oct 20, 2016. Retrieved Oct 18, 2016.
- ^ Gardner, Gavin T (5 April 2013). "Artist Interview with Steven DaLuz". Gavin Gardner Fine Art. Archived from the original on Feb 2, 2017. Retrieved Oct 18, 2016.
- ^ MacDonald, Scott (July 17, 2017). "Sharon Lockhart and James Benning: Decelerating Cinema". DOK.REVUE. Archived from the original on Dec 30, 2019.
General and cited references
[edit]- Luminism article in ArtLex Art Dictionary
- Wilmerding, John (1989). American Light: The Luminist Movement 1850–1875 (Reprinted ed.). Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press. ISBN 978-0691002804.
External links
[edit]- American Paintings in The Metropolitan Museum of Art, a fully digitized three volume exhibition catalog
- Hudson River School Visions: The Landscapes of Sanford R. Gifford, an exhibition catalog from The Metropolitan Museum of Art (fully available online in PDF), which contains much on Luminism