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Greenwood Lake

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Just as Frederic Church and Albert Bierstadt had homes built on the banks of the Hudson River when they reached the height of their careers, Jasper F. Cropsey had a mansion erected by Greenwood Lake, which became one of his favourite motifs from 1843 onwards. Like the rest of the Hudson River painters, Cropsey had travelled to Greenwood Lake, located on the border of the states of New York and New Jersey, in search of an idyllic, picturesque nature setting to paint. Greenwood Lake, a late work that Cropsey painted on returning from a stay of several years in London, depicts the explosion of colour that precedes the coming of winter, before the striking American vegetation loses all its colour. The panoramic format, intentionally enlarged horizontally, that began to prevail in American painting towards the mid-twentieth century and, as Kenneth W.Maddox points out, had already been used by Cropsey in earlier works like Lake Ontario, gives greater prominence to the effects of the light and its reflection on the broad horizon and evidences the fresh importance the artist attaches to describing the atmospheric properties of the golden sunset, influenced by the poetics of the Luminist school. In London, Cropsey, who did not cease to paint American landscapes, completed the most ambitious landscape of his entire career in 1860, Autumn. On the Hudson River, which caused a stir when shown at the London International Exhibition of 1862 and established him as “America’s painter of autumn.” The artist himself commented that his aim was “to convey an idea of the vastness and magnitude of the American landscape, the clearness and beauty of the atmosphere, and the richness and variety of the colour in the foliage during the Indian Summer period of the year.” To Cropsey and his American contemporaries, the autumnal splendour of America’s forests — whose existence was doubted by the Europeans — represented God’s special blessing of their Nation. It is therefore not surprising that the artist, a fervent believer who became a lay elder of the Dutch reformed church over time, should have regarded the apotheosis of autumn as the glorification of life on earth and the celebration of God’s benevolence for allowing mankind to enjoy this glorious season. Furthermore, according to a Bible reference from the book of Isaiah, “all of us wither like a leaf, ” and the vivid colours of autumn are generally interpreted as a metaphor of the passage of time, of the final moment in life when man achieves greater spiritual “enlightenment” as his physical state deteriorates. However, Cropsey’s metaphorical streak was much more restrained than that of Thomas Cole, his first “master.”His painting was more naturalistic, closer to Asher B. Durand and Frederic Edwin Church, and clearly marked by the influence of John Ruskin, whom he met in England. In this work from the Museo Thyssen-Bornemisza collection, Cropsey combines the broad, dramatic view of the lake with a meticulous depiction of the tiniest details of the vegetation, which the painter renders with utmost care and faithfulness to life. If we peer carefully at the lower left portion, two tiny figures standing on a rocky promontory who gaze at the multicoloured sunset over the lake can be distinguished. These two figures, whom the painter dwarfs in order to exaggerate the grandiosity of nature, irremediably recall the Kindred Spirits Cole and Bryant, who were immortalised by Durand while marvelling at the immensity of the landscape from a rock. Paloma Alarcó
Thyssen-Bornemisza Museum
Title: Greenwood Lake
Description:
Just as Frederic Church and Albert Bierstadt had homes built on the banks of the Hudson River when they reached the height of their careers, Jasper F.
Cropsey had a mansion erected by Greenwood Lake, which became one of his favourite motifs from 1843 onwards.
Like the rest of the Hudson River painters, Cropsey had travelled to Greenwood Lake, located on the border of the states of New York and New Jersey, in search of an idyllic, picturesque nature setting to paint.
Greenwood Lake, a late work that Cropsey painted on returning from a stay of several years in London, depicts the explosion of colour that precedes the coming of winter, before the striking American vegetation loses all its colour.
The panoramic format, intentionally enlarged horizontally, that began to prevail in American painting towards the mid-twentieth century and, as Kenneth W.
Maddox points out, had already been used by Cropsey in earlier works like Lake Ontario, gives greater prominence to the effects of the light and its reflection on the broad horizon and evidences the fresh importance the artist attaches to describing the atmospheric properties of the golden sunset, influenced by the poetics of the Luminist school.
In London, Cropsey, who did not cease to paint American landscapes, completed the most ambitious landscape of his entire career in 1860, Autumn.
On the Hudson River, which caused a stir when shown at the London International Exhibition of 1862 and established him as “America’s painter of autumn.
” The artist himself commented that his aim was “to convey an idea of the vastness and magnitude of the American landscape, the clearness and beauty of the atmosphere, and the richness and variety of the colour in the foliage during the Indian Summer period of the year.
” To Cropsey and his American contemporaries, the autumnal splendour of America’s forests — whose existence was doubted by the Europeans — represented God’s special blessing of their Nation.
It is therefore not surprising that the artist, a fervent believer who became a lay elder of the Dutch reformed church over time, should have regarded the apotheosis of autumn as the glorification of life on earth and the celebration of God’s benevolence for allowing mankind to enjoy this glorious season.
Furthermore, according to a Bible reference from the book of Isaiah, “all of us wither like a leaf, ” and the vivid colours of autumn are generally interpreted as a metaphor of the passage of time, of the final moment in life when man achieves greater spiritual “enlightenment” as his physical state deteriorates.
However, Cropsey’s metaphorical streak was much more restrained than that of Thomas Cole, his first “master.
”His painting was more naturalistic, closer to Asher B.
Durand and Frederic Edwin Church, and clearly marked by the influence of John Ruskin, whom he met in England.
In this work from the Museo Thyssen-Bornemisza collection, Cropsey combines the broad, dramatic view of the lake with a meticulous depiction of the tiniest details of the vegetation, which the painter renders with utmost care and faithfulness to life.
If we peer carefully at the lower left portion, two tiny figures standing on a rocky promontory who gaze at the multicoloured sunset over the lake can be distinguished.
These two figures, whom the painter dwarfs in order to exaggerate the grandiosity of nature, irremediably recall the Kindred Spirits Cole and Bryant, who were immortalised by Durand while marvelling at the immensity of the landscape from a rock.
Paloma Alarcó.

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