FACes
& PlaceS
AROUND TOWN
New
Hope Impressionists
by Andrea Giambrone*
Parry
Mansion
Painting
by Kristen Moore *
Since
colonial times the riverside town of New Hope,
Pennsylvania attracted painters to capture
its quaint serenity and beauty. This hamlet originally
served as the halfway-point for those traveling
to and from New York City and Philadelphia. As
the 19th century charged through America’s
Industrial Revolution, New Hope became less of
a stopping point and more of a destination.
Despite more and more of the northeast giving
way to burgeoning industry, New Hope remained
untainted by this modernization, providing harried
city dwellers an anachronistic treat of a nostalgic
setting and landscape. This appeal would soon
be felt by those American artists who were well
practiced in the painting of European countrysides.
Through the settlement of already renowned artists,
a New Hope art colony would spring forth as one
of the most unique movements to come out of early
20th century history.
The greatest asset of New Hope was not only
its beauty, but its location. Having such a
close proximity to historic Philadelphia and
colossal New York caused urban professionals,
like Dr. George Marshall, to seek out places
like New Hope and make them objects of attraction.
Dr. George Marshall is famous for having purchased
the abandoned New Hope property of Phillips
Mill. His purchase and New Hope residence was
key in the attraction of the founder of the
New Hope Impressionist colony, William Lathrop.
When Marshall had the New York City-based artist
stay on his property in 1899, Lathrop found the
natural peace and beauty of the land so inspirational
he immediately purchased property to live and
paint on. Many artists would follow in the example
of Lathrop and take themselves out of the claustrophobia
of the city, where they often taught and sold
their work, to freely paint.
Of
the serious artists who flocked to join the
New Hope colony, Daniel Garber and Edward Redfield
came forth as the most prominent members of the
growing Delaware River movement. Lathrop’s
renowned reputation and his many associations
acted as a magnet from 1907 onward as he attracted
artists’ attention, as well as their residence,
to the New Hope area by inviting them out to
his property. Most of those artists who would
form the New Hope group were émigrés
from other parts of the United States, save Walter
Baum who was a native of Bucks County.
The apex of the New Hope colony occurred with
collective exhibiting tours across the United
States and Europe. Between the years of 1915
and 1917, six painters grouped together into
what they called the “New Hope group”.
The river town’s top painters showed
together with other Pennsylvania Impressionists
in 1915 as a feature in the Panama-Pacific
International Exposition.
The startlingly beautiful and daringly colorful
rural scenes of the Pennsylvania artists gave
New Hope and its surrounding countryside wide
acclaim and heightened interest for this hidden
aesthetic treasure and the talent it harbored.
The following year brought together the informal
collaboration of the New Hope sextet: Daniel
Garber, William Lathrop, Robert Spencer, Rae
Sloan Bredin, Morgan Colt, and Charles Rosen.
Ironically the man who is the most famed New
Hope artist, Edward Redfield, refused to join
the coterie because of his disinterest in being
labeled with an association tied to a region.
Nonetheless, the New Hope Group showed throughout
the next two years in such places as the Corcoran
Gallery in Washington D.C., the Detroit Institute
of the Arts, the Carnegie Institute in Pittsburgh,
and the Cincinnati Art Museum. The group would
also be regularly featured in New York and Philadelphia
as well.
Despite being overshadowed by avant-guard and
socially expressive work of New York centered
artists for much of the 20th century, a revived
interest into the beauty and importance has taken
place with the work of artists and patrons residing
in the New Hope area.
The
praise the New Hope group received by early
critics was based on their individuality in how
they utilized the impressionist style. Although
the New Hope artists exhibited together, much
like the founding French Impressionists themselves
had no single “style”. Edward Redfield
was known to have boasted of being a strict “plein
air” painter, executing huge winter scenes
on sight, like Easter Morning and Woodland Brook
(one of many of his winter scenes near creek
and river banks). Yet Rae Sloan Brebin was the
only artist of the group who painted primarily
the human figure, one example being his portrait
Jean in White. They came together because of
their personal comradery and social lives more
than a strict artistic agenda.
The New Hope Impressionists are always identified
by their rural local scenes and views of the
familiar sights in the New Hope area. The New
Hope scenes and the continued focus on the color
and light of the setting would play into the
contented, familiar serenity that the artists
identified New Hope with.
Considering their attraction to New Hope and
their usage of it as an escapist retreat, New
Hope Impressionist work sought to exude a tranquility
of a time untouched by industrialization. They
captured familiar landmarks or identifiable spots,
in paintings titled by location: Phillips Mill
Barn by Colt, Tinicum Hillside by Daniel Garber,
Lane in New Hope by Brebin, and many more. These
every-day locales were held dear to the community
allowing the viewer to retain the image of a
time unthreatened by the turbulence that the
20th century was bound to bring.
The New Hope Impressionists constituted one
part of a continuing legacy of artistry that
New Hope has fostered since its earliest days.
However, the notoriety of prominent artists coupled
with the fascination with impressionism at the
dawn of the 20th century gave birth to one of
the most unique artistic treasures in American
Art. A time in history, untainted by the modern
world, will forever be captured as the haven
for those who painted in New Hope.
_________________
The
two New Hope Solebury High School honors history
classes,
in cooperation with the New Hope Historical
Society, have created a new series of essays
(and artwork) on local areas of historical interest.
Around Town this month features two of the
projects
submitted - an essay on the New Hope Impressionists
by Andrea Giambone and a wonderful
painting by Kristen
Moore.
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