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Waverly Oaks

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The painting career of the until then illustrator Winslow Homer began in 1859 when he moved from Boston to New York. He took easel painting lessons from the French-born landscape and genre artist Frederic Rondel and at the National Academy of Design in the nascent metropolis. The Museo Thyssen-Bornemisza Waverly Oaks, dated 1864, is representative of this initial stage in which Winslow Homer began painting nature scenes with a completely personal style and developed an interest in studying the human figure and its relationship with the landscape. The Waverly Oaks park, famous for its century-old oak trees, was located between Waltham and Belmont, near Boston, and began to be frequented by nature lovers and a few plein air painters in the middle of the nineteenth century. In the centre of the composition, which is small in format but monumental in scale, two elegantly dressed women stroll through the park. Although, as in another work he painted that same year, The Initials, the positioning of the two small figures amid the marked verticals of the tree trunks could imply that they are dominated by nature, Homer affords his figures such a powerful presence that they have a monumental quality regardless of their size in the painting. Furthermore, as Lucretia H. Giese points out, these compositions, dated a year before the civil war ended, symbolise the absence of the combatants through female solitude. Although Homer would not travel to Paris until a year after completing Waverly Oaks, the similarities with Corot’s sous bois scenes and the influence of the painters of the Barbizon School and of the incipient Impressionist painting are patently obvious. It is highly revealing that when Waverly Oaks was first shown at the Samuel P. Avery Gallery in New York in 1866, critics were struck by its spontaneity in contrast to the detailed images of his Hudson River School contemporaries. A critic writing for The Nation stated of Homer: “Three pictures of his may be seen at Mr. Avery’s rooms in Broadway. They are all three very sketchy, rapidly painted in the ‘broadest’ manner.” Despite its favourable reviews, the painting remained unsold. Katherine Manthorne, citing Goodrich and basing her conclusion on the letter Homer sent to Charles Vorhees from Paris offering him Waverly Oaks for a hundred dollars, deduced that his friend would have acquired it shortly afterwards. The recently published catalogue raisonné of the painter’s work explains that the work Vorhees finally purchased was A Game of Croquet and that the whereabouts of Waverly Oaks remained unknown for several decades. Paloma Alarcó
Thyssen-Bornemisza Museum
Title: Waverly Oaks
Description:
The painting career of the until then illustrator Winslow Homer began in 1859 when he moved from Boston to New York.
He took easel painting lessons from the French-born landscape and genre artist Frederic Rondel and at the National Academy of Design in the nascent metropolis.
The Museo Thyssen-Bornemisza Waverly Oaks, dated 1864, is representative of this initial stage in which Winslow Homer began painting nature scenes with a completely personal style and developed an interest in studying the human figure and its relationship with the landscape.
The Waverly Oaks park, famous for its century-old oak trees, was located between Waltham and Belmont, near Boston, and began to be frequented by nature lovers and a few plein air painters in the middle of the nineteenth century.
In the centre of the composition, which is small in format but monumental in scale, two elegantly dressed women stroll through the park.
Although, as in another work he painted that same year, The Initials, the positioning of the two small figures amid the marked verticals of the tree trunks could imply that they are dominated by nature, Homer affords his figures such a powerful presence that they have a monumental quality regardless of their size in the painting.
Furthermore, as Lucretia H.
Giese points out, these compositions, dated a year before the civil war ended, symbolise the absence of the combatants through female solitude.
Although Homer would not travel to Paris until a year after completing Waverly Oaks, the similarities with Corot’s sous bois scenes and the influence of the painters of the Barbizon School and of the incipient Impressionist painting are patently obvious.
It is highly revealing that when Waverly Oaks was first shown at the Samuel P.
Avery Gallery in New York in 1866, critics were struck by its spontaneity in contrast to the detailed images of his Hudson River School contemporaries.
A critic writing for The Nation stated of Homer: “Three pictures of his may be seen at Mr.
Avery’s rooms in Broadway.
They are all three very sketchy, rapidly painted in the ‘broadest’ manner.
” Despite its favourable reviews, the painting remained unsold.
Katherine Manthorne, citing Goodrich and basing her conclusion on the letter Homer sent to Charles Vorhees from Paris offering him Waverly Oaks for a hundred dollars, deduced that his friend would have acquired it shortly afterwards.
The recently published catalogue raisonné of the painter’s work explains that the work Vorhees finally purchased was A Game of Croquet and that the whereabouts of Waverly Oaks remained unknown for several decades.
Paloma Alarcó.

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