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'''''Mountain Landscape''''' is an 1849, early period painting by American landscape painter [[Frederic Edwin Church]] of the [[Hudson River School]] of artists. The work depicts a landscape in the [[Northeastern United States]] based on Church's travels in [[Vermont]]. The painting was originally part of the Nickerson art collection but was later donated to [[Valparaiso University]] as part of the Sloan bequest in 1953. In 2024, the university proposed selling the painting as an asset to fund dormitory renovations, leading to a [[Valparaiso University deaccessioning controversy|contentious debate]] about the ethics of [[deaccessioning]] artwork.
'''''Mountain Landscape''''', previously known as ''Sunset—West Rock, New Haven'', is an 1849 landscape painting by American artist [[Frederic Edwin Church]] of the [[Hudson River School]], completed during his early period. The work depicts a mountain landscape with a lake and a small farm in the [[Northeastern United States]] based on Church's travels through the state of [[Vermont]]. The painting was originally part of the Nickerson art collection but was later donated to [[Valparaiso University]] as part of the Sloan bequest in 1953 and exhibited at the [[Brauer Museum of Art]]. In 2023, the university proposed selling the painting as an asset to fund dormitory renovations, leading to a [[Valparaiso University deaccessioning controversy|contentious debate]] about the ethics of [[deaccessioning]] artwork.


==Background==
==Background==
Church was raised in [[Hartford, Connecticut]], where he remained from 1826 to 1843. He moved to [[Catskill, New York]], in 1844, to study art under [[Thomas Cole]], the founder of the [[Hudson River School]], for two years. Cole preferred the style of creating compositions of both representational and imaginative landscapes, where the artist creates a fusion of what is both in the natural world and in the mind on the canvas. During this time, Church made sketches in Long Island and completed a painting in Catskill (''The Catskill Creek'', 1845). He first exhibited two works, ''Twilight among the Mountains'' and ''Hudson Scenery'' at the National Academy of Design in 1845.<ref name="nga">Kelly, Franklin; Gould, Stephen Jay; Ryan, James Anthony; Rindge, Deborah (1989). [https://www.nga.gov/content/dam/ngaweb/research/publications/pdfs/frederic-edwin-church.pdf ''Frederic Edwin Church'']. National Gallery of Art: Smithsonian Institution Press. pp. 32-43; 158-160.{{ISBN|9780894681363}}. {{OCLC|20016290}}.</ref>
Church was raised in [[Hartford, Connecticut]], where he remained from 1826 to 1843. He moved to [[Catskill, New York]], in 1844, to study art for two years under [[Thomas Cole]], the founder of the [[Hudson River School]]. Cole preferred the style of creating compositions of both representational and imaginative landscapes, where the artist creates a fusion of what is both in the natural world and in the mind on the canvas. During this time, Church made sketches in Long Island and completed a painting in Catskill (''The Catskill Creek'', 1845). He first exhibited two works, ''Twilight among the Mountains'' and ''Hudson Scenery'' at the National Academy of Design in 1845.<ref name="nga">Kelly, Franklin; Gould, Stephen Jay; Ryan, James Anthony; Rindge, Deborah (1989). [https://www.nga.gov/content/dam/ngaweb/research/publications/pdfs/frederic-edwin-church.pdf ''Frederic Edwin Church'']. National Gallery of Art: Smithsonian Institution Press. pp. 32-43; 158-160.{{ISBN|9780894681363}}. {{OCLC|20016290}}.</ref>


==Development==
==Development==
Church sketched throughout southern Vermont in 1849, completing more than ten paintings that year, including ''A Mountain Tempest'', ''The Plague of Darkness'', ''West Rock, New Haven'', ''Above the Clouds at Sunrise'', ''View in Pittsford, Vermont'', ''New England Landscape (Evening after a Storm)'', ''The Harp of the Winds (A Passing Storm)'', ''Morning'', ''Sunset'', and ''Lower Falls, Rochester'', as only a small selection of his works that year.<ref name="nga"/> ''Mountain Landscape'' is believed to have been created back in the studio based on Church's memories in Vermont. At one time, it was alternately titled ''Sunset, West Rock, New Haven'',<ref name="siris"/> as it was thought to depict [[West Rock, New Haven]], which was later discounted.​<ref>Kelly, Franklin; Carr, Gerald L., Church (1987). [https://archive.org/details/earlylandscapeso0000kell ''The Early Landscapes of Frederic Edwin Church, 1845-1854'']. Amon Carter Museum. pp. 99-100. {{ISBN|9780883600788}}. {{OCLC|1244732516}}.</ref>
Church sketched throughout southern Vermont in 1849, completing more than ten paintings that year, including ''A Mountain Tempest'', ''The Plague of Darkness'', ''West Rock, New Haven'', ''Above the Clouds at Sunrise'', ''View in Pittsford, Vermont'', ''New England Landscape (Evening after a Storm)'', ''The Harp of the Winds (A Passing Storm)'', ''Morning'', ''Sunset'', and ''Lower Falls, Rochester'', as only a small selection.<ref name="nga"/> ''Mountain Landscape'' is believed to have been created back in the studio sometime between 1849 and 1850<ref name="nga"/> based on Church's memories of his time in Vermont.<ref name="hert"/> It was alternately titled ''Sunset—West Rock, New Haven'',<ref name="aic">[https://archive.org/details/collectionofmrmr00arti ''Collection of Mr. & Mrs. Samuel M. Nickerson: Presented to The Art Institute of Chicago, February, 1900'']. Art Institute of Chicago. p. 7. {{OCLC|6030139}}.</ref> as it was thought to depict [[West Rock, New Haven]], an idea which was later discounted.​<ref>Kelly, Franklin; Carr, Gerald L., Church (1987). [https://archive.org/details/earlylandscapeso0000kell ''The Early Landscapes of Frederic Edwin Church, 1845-1854'']. Amon Carter Museum. pp. 99-100. {{ISBN|9780883600788}}. {{OCLC|1244732516}}.</ref>


==Description==
==Description==
The scene unfolds at twilight, with a blueish-white sky tinged with purples and grays, echoed by the surrounding clouds. The amber glow of the fading light of sunset bathes the mountain in the center-right of the composition. Wild forests envelop the scene, providing a counterpoint to the orderly farmlands visible in a clearing in the middleground—a rare glimpse of human presence. Nature's untamed expanse contrasts with the geometric patterns of cultivated land. A lake in the foreground reflects the scene with serene clarity, while a lone figure in a boat drifts near the shore, adding a contemplative dimension to the composition. A waterfall punctuates the landscape near the forest's edge, further animating the tranquil scene.<ref name="dex">Dexter, Matt (1996). [http://scholar.valpo.edu/core_reader/213 "Mountain Landscape"]. Description Essays. ''The Valpo Core Reader''. Valparaiso University. 213. Retrieved October 31, 2024.</ref>
The painting depicts a landscape in the Northeastern United States, thought to be Vermont, with mountains at sunset. In the middleground, a clearing can be seen, while in the foreground, a boat appears on the water.<ref name="siris">[https://siris-artinventories.si.edu/ipac20/ipac.jsp?session=17I041P619K71.27629&profile=ariall&source=~!siartinventories&view=subscriptionsummary&uri=full=3100001~!347932~!0&ri=3&aspect=Keyword&menu=search&ipp=20&spp=20&staffonly=&term=14320006&index=.NW&uindex=&aspect=Keyword&menu=search&ri=3 "Mountain Landscape, (painting)"]. Inventories of American Painting and Sculpture, [[Smithsonian American Art Museum]].</ref>


==Provenance==
==Provenance==
The painting was originally owned by Samuel M. Nickerson, president of the [[First National Bank of Chicago]] in the late 19th century. The Nickerson art collection, of which ''Mountain Landscape'' was a part, was gifted to the [[Art Institute of Chicago]] in 1900,<ref>[http://www.jstor.org/stable/4119945 "Samuel M. Nickerson"]. (1914). ''Bulletin of the Art Institute of Chicago'' (1907-1951). 8 (2): 19.</ref> where the painting remained for 50 years.<ref name="siris"/> Percy Sloan, the son of [[Hudson River School]] painter Junius R. Sloan, purchased the painting in 1950 from the Art Institute of Chicago, which he then donated with 400 other artworks to [[Valparaiso University]] in 1953.<ref>Hertzlieb, Gregg (Fall/Winter 2009-2010). [https://www.valpo.edu/vpr/hertzliebchurch.html "Frederic Edwin Church: ''Mountain Landscape''"]. ''Valparaiso Poetry Review''. XI (1). Retrieved October 30, 2024.</ref>
Originally owned by banker Samuel M. Nickerson (1830–1914),<ref name="siris">[https://siris-artinventories.si.edu/ipac20/ipac.jsp?session=17I041P619K71.27629&profile=ariall&source=~!siartinventories&view=subscriptionsummary&uri=full=3100001~!347932~!0&ri=3&aspect=Keyword&menu=search&ipp=20&spp=20&staffonly=&term=14320006&index=.NW&uindex=&aspect=Keyword&menu=search&ri=3 "Mountain Landscape, (painting)"]. Inventories of American Painting and Sculpture, [[Smithsonian American Art Museum]].</ref> president of the [[First National Bank of Chicago]] and a prominent 19th-century art collector,<ref>"[https://research.frick.org/directory/detail/3570 Nickerson, Samuel M. (Samuel Mayo), 1830-1914]". Archives Directory for the History of Collecting in America. Art History Research Databases. [[Frick Collection]]. Retrieved October 31, 2024.</ref> the painting was part of his extensive art collection,<ref name="aic"/> which he donated to the [[Art Institute of Chicago]] in 1900.<ref>[http://www.jstor.org/stable/4119945 "Samuel M. Nickerson"]. (1914). ''Bulletin of the Art Institute of Chicago'' (1907-1951). 8 (2): 19.</ref> In 1950, Percy Sloan, son of the Hudson River School artist Junius R. Sloan, acquired ''Mountain Landscape'' from the Art Institute and donated it to [[Valparaiso University]] as part of a larger bequest of 400 works.<ref name="hert">Hertzlieb, Gregg (Fall/Winter 2009-2010). [https://www.valpo.edu/vpr/hertzliebchurch.html "Frederic Edwin Church: ''Mountain Landscape''"]. ''Valparaiso Poetry Review''. Valparaiso University. XI (1). Retrieved October 30, 2024.</ref>

==Reproductions==
Gregg Hertzlieb, former Brauer Museum director and curator, notes that an image of the painting is difficult to fully capture with photography, particularly in the attempt to duplicate the intensity of the reflected orange and red sunset light which sparkles with [[Glaze (painting technique)|scumbled]] paint. "The painting seems to exude a rosy light that reaches out to the viewer as [one] bends forward to examine the surface", writes Hertzlieb. "The orange and rose light does appear in photographic reproduction but does not seem to have the depth, the complexity that one sees in the actual piece."<ref name="hert"/>


==Deaccessioning==
==Deaccessioning==
{{main|Valparaiso University deaccessioning controversy}}
Until 2024, the painting was held by the [[Brauer Museum of Art]] at Valparaiso University, but is currently undergoing [[deaccessioning]] to fund the renovation of two residence halls at the university, a decision that was [[Valparaiso University deaccessioning controversy|protested by the faculty, students, and larger art community]] due to the ethical guidelines followed by museums when entering the deaccessioning process, which requires them to reinvest the proceeds from any art sale back into the museum's art collection.<ref>Boucher, Brian (September 4, 2024). [https://news.artnet.com/art-world/valparaiso-university-brauer-museum-can-sell-paintings-2531663 "A Court Approves Valparaiso University's Controversial Plan to Sell Paintings From Brauer Museum Collection"]. ''[[Artnet]]''. Retrieved October 30, 2024.</ref>
In 2023, ''Mountain Landscape'' became the subject of a controversial proposal. Valparaiso University, facing financial pressures amidst declining enrollment and a deficit, announced plans to sell the painting as part of an effort to fund dormitory renovations to attract new students. This decision ignited a heated debate over the ethics of [[deaccessioning]]—a process governed by ethical museum guidelines that typically mandate reinvesting the proceeds of artwork sales back into the museum's collection. Instead, the proposed sale aimed to direct funds toward non-art-related expenditures, provoking strong opposition from faculty, students, and the wider art community. The controversy highlighted the tension between the financial reality of modern educational institutions and the [[Conservation and restoration of cultural property|cultural stewardship]] entrusted to them, raising important questions about the preservation of artistic heritage.<ref>Boucher, Brian (September 4, 2024). [https://news.artnet.com/art-world/valparaiso-university-brauer-museum-can-sell-paintings-2531663 "A Court Approves Valparaiso University's Controversial Plan to Sell Paintings From Brauer Museum Collection"]. ''[[Artnet]]''. Retrieved October 30, 2024.</ref>


==References==
==References==
{{reflist}}
{{reflist}}


{{Frederic Edwin Church|state=collapsed}}
{{Frederic Edwin Church|state=collapsed}}


[[Category:Paintings by Frederic Edwin Church]]
[[Category:Paintings by Frederic Edwin Church]]

Latest revision as of 13:42, 1 November 2024

Mountain Landscape
ArtistFrederic Edwin Church Edit this on Wikidata
Yearc. 1849
Mediumoil paint, canvas
Dimensions34.6 cm (13.6 in) × 48.5 cm (19.1 in)
LocationBrauer Museum of Art
Accession No.53.01.107 Edit this on Wikidata

Mountain Landscape, previously known as Sunset—West Rock, New Haven, is an 1849 landscape painting by American artist Frederic Edwin Church of the Hudson River School, completed during his early period. The work depicts a mountain landscape with a lake and a small farm in the Northeastern United States based on Church's travels through the state of Vermont. The painting was originally part of the Nickerson art collection but was later donated to Valparaiso University as part of the Sloan bequest in 1953 and exhibited at the Brauer Museum of Art. In 2023, the university proposed selling the painting as an asset to fund dormitory renovations, leading to a contentious debate about the ethics of deaccessioning artwork.

Background

[edit]

Church was raised in Hartford, Connecticut, where he remained from 1826 to 1843. He moved to Catskill, New York, in 1844, to study art for two years under Thomas Cole, the founder of the Hudson River School. Cole preferred the style of creating compositions of both representational and imaginative landscapes, where the artist creates a fusion of what is both in the natural world and in the mind on the canvas. During this time, Church made sketches in Long Island and completed a painting in Catskill (The Catskill Creek, 1845). He first exhibited two works, Twilight among the Mountains and Hudson Scenery at the National Academy of Design in 1845.[1]

Development

[edit]

Church sketched throughout southern Vermont in 1849, completing more than ten paintings that year, including A Mountain Tempest, The Plague of Darkness, West Rock, New Haven, Above the Clouds at Sunrise, View in Pittsford, Vermont, New England Landscape (Evening after a Storm), The Harp of the Winds (A Passing Storm), Morning, Sunset, and Lower Falls, Rochester, as only a small selection.[1] Mountain Landscape is believed to have been created back in the studio sometime between 1849 and 1850[1] based on Church's memories of his time in Vermont.[2] It was alternately titled Sunset—West Rock, New Haven,[3] as it was thought to depict West Rock, New Haven, an idea which was later discounted.​[4]

Description

[edit]

The scene unfolds at twilight, with a blueish-white sky tinged with purples and grays, echoed by the surrounding clouds. The amber glow of the fading light of sunset bathes the mountain in the center-right of the composition. Wild forests envelop the scene, providing a counterpoint to the orderly farmlands visible in a clearing in the middleground—a rare glimpse of human presence. Nature's untamed expanse contrasts with the geometric patterns of cultivated land. A lake in the foreground reflects the scene with serene clarity, while a lone figure in a boat drifts near the shore, adding a contemplative dimension to the composition. A waterfall punctuates the landscape near the forest's edge, further animating the tranquil scene.[5]

Provenance

[edit]

Originally owned by banker Samuel M. Nickerson (1830–1914),[6] president of the First National Bank of Chicago and a prominent 19th-century art collector,[7] the painting was part of his extensive art collection,[3] which he donated to the Art Institute of Chicago in 1900.[8] In 1950, Percy Sloan, son of the Hudson River School artist Junius R. Sloan, acquired Mountain Landscape from the Art Institute and donated it to Valparaiso University as part of a larger bequest of 400 works.[2]

Reproductions

[edit]

Gregg Hertzlieb, former Brauer Museum director and curator, notes that an image of the painting is difficult to fully capture with photography, particularly in the attempt to duplicate the intensity of the reflected orange and red sunset light which sparkles with scumbled paint. "The painting seems to exude a rosy light that reaches out to the viewer as [one] bends forward to examine the surface", writes Hertzlieb. "The orange and rose light does appear in photographic reproduction but does not seem to have the depth, the complexity that one sees in the actual piece."[2]

Deaccessioning

[edit]

In 2023, Mountain Landscape became the subject of a controversial proposal. Valparaiso University, facing financial pressures amidst declining enrollment and a deficit, announced plans to sell the painting as part of an effort to fund dormitory renovations to attract new students. This decision ignited a heated debate over the ethics of deaccessioning—a process governed by ethical museum guidelines that typically mandate reinvesting the proceeds of artwork sales back into the museum's collection. Instead, the proposed sale aimed to direct funds toward non-art-related expenditures, provoking strong opposition from faculty, students, and the wider art community. The controversy highlighted the tension between the financial reality of modern educational institutions and the cultural stewardship entrusted to them, raising important questions about the preservation of artistic heritage.[9]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b c Kelly, Franklin; Gould, Stephen Jay; Ryan, James Anthony; Rindge, Deborah (1989). Frederic Edwin Church. National Gallery of Art: Smithsonian Institution Press. pp. 32-43; 158-160.ISBN 9780894681363. OCLC 20016290.
  2. ^ a b c Hertzlieb, Gregg (Fall/Winter 2009-2010). "Frederic Edwin Church: Mountain Landscape". Valparaiso Poetry Review. Valparaiso University. XI (1). Retrieved October 30, 2024.
  3. ^ a b Collection of Mr. & Mrs. Samuel M. Nickerson: Presented to The Art Institute of Chicago, February, 1900. Art Institute of Chicago. p. 7. OCLC 6030139.
  4. ^ Kelly, Franklin; Carr, Gerald L., Church (1987). The Early Landscapes of Frederic Edwin Church, 1845-1854. Amon Carter Museum. pp. 99-100. ISBN 9780883600788. OCLC 1244732516.
  5. ^ Dexter, Matt (1996). "Mountain Landscape". Description Essays. The Valpo Core Reader. Valparaiso University. 213. Retrieved October 31, 2024.
  6. ^ "Mountain Landscape, (painting)". Inventories of American Painting and Sculpture, Smithsonian American Art Museum.
  7. ^ "Nickerson, Samuel M. (Samuel Mayo), 1830-1914". Archives Directory for the History of Collecting in America. Art History Research Databases. Frick Collection. Retrieved October 31, 2024.
  8. ^ "Samuel M. Nickerson". (1914). Bulletin of the Art Institute of Chicago (1907-1951). 8 (2): 19.
  9. ^ Boucher, Brian (September 4, 2024). "A Court Approves Valparaiso University's Controversial Plan to Sell Paintings From Brauer Museum Collection". Artnet. Retrieved October 30, 2024.
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