Museum
March
Join artBahrain.org
Advertisement
March 2012
MANAMA
CAPITAL
OF
ARAB
CULTURE
2012

Newsletter Sign-up
Submit Events
Submit Exhibition Opening Photos

Copyright © 2010, artBahrain.org. All rights reserved. Use of this site constitutes agreement with our Terms and Conditions.

Selected works from the
38th Annual Fine Arts Exhibition
Americans in Florence
Sargent and the American Impressionists

Palazzo Strozzi, Florence
3 March -15 July
2.12	John Singer Sargent, Vernon Lee, 1881, oil on canvas; 53.7 x 43.2 cm; London, Tate, bequeathed by Miss Vernon Lee through Miss Cooper Willis 1935, N04787 James Carroll Beckwith, Portrait of William Merritt Chase, 1882; oil on canvas; 198 x 96.5 cm; Indianapolis (IN), Indianapolis Museum of Art, gift of the artist, 10.8 John Singer Sargent, Henry James, 1913, oil on canvas; 85.1 x 67.3 cm; Lent by the National Portrait Gallery, London. Bequeathed by Henry James, 1916, NPG 176
Americans in Florence. Sargent and the American Impressionists on view at Palazzo Strozzi, Florence, from 3
March to 15 July 2012, sets out to illustrate the extremely fertile and multifaceted relationship that the painters of
the New World established with Florence and other cities in Tuscany between the mid 19th century and the World
War 1. After the end of the American Civil War, there was a substantial increase in the number of American artists
travelling to Europe, although, of course, the 18th century Grand Tour tradition had never really died. The painters’
main destinations were Florence, Venice and Rome, cities which the artists idolised in their eagerness to explore their
ancient monuments and to take their own measure against the art of the past. They were also attracted by the charm
and variety of the landscape, so different from the countryside back home, by the light, by the evocative and
atmospheric panoramic views, and by the picturesque charm of the local people.

The exhibition is divided into five sections with works by over thirty Americans artists who worked in Florence.
Some, like John Singer Sargent, are famous, while the work of other less well-known artists is being shown in Italy
for the first time. On returning home, they all became celebrated painters and authoritative masters who played a
crucial role in forming the new generation of American painters and in forging the birth of a national school of
painting. Their paintings dialogue in the sections of the exhibition with those by Florentine and Tuscan painters
including Telemaco Signorini, Vittorio Corcos and Michele Gordigiani, whose work came closest to the sophisticated
manner, so rich in literary allusions, that was favoured and nurtured by the most exclusive circles in that
cosmopolitan colony.

Section 1. Room with a View
This section focuses on the places where the Americans’ daily life was played out in Florence. Sargent’s The Hotel
Room
is typical of their first encounter with the city, involving an inevitable sojourn in a hotel in the centre to give
them the time to explore and look for somewhere more appropriate to stay, far from the din, the poverty and the filth
of the metropolis. Henry James, an illustrious American writer of the same generation, describes Florence as
lethargically overlooking its sluggish green river, as in Lorenzo Gelati’s painting View of Florence with Washing
hanging out to dry
, “basking” in its decadent beauty, brimming with that atmosphere of the past which James and
other Americans were aware was so lacking in their own country. Similarly, the market place, as shown in Telemaco
Signorini’s painting, was a discovery for the Americans, with its hubbub, colours, smells and dirt, not to mention the
threat represented by beggars and pickpockets. The aim of these painters and their intellectual friends was to take up
residence just outside Florence, in a villa in the hills, such as the village of Batelli in View of Piagentina painted by
Silvestro Lega, then in a country setting that has been totally swallowed up by the expanding city today.

Section 2. Americans in Florence
The second section consists of a gallery of self-portraits and portraits of the exhibition’s leading players, the
American artists who spent time in Florence, whose work forms the heart of the exhibitions’ subsequent themes.
These include Sargent, Frank Duveneck, William Merritt Chase, Cecilia Beaux, Edmund Charles Tarbell, Robert
Vonnoh, Thomas Eakins and Frederick Childe Hassam, all of whom were ensnared in the engrossing experience of
the Old World, and their search for a personal ‘room with a view’ capable of unveiling the aesthetic and literary
mystery of a city to which some of them would later donate their self-portraits (now in the Uffizi). Alongside these
painters, the portraits of Vernon Lee and Henry James evoke the presence of the large Anglo-American colony of
scholars, collectors, writers and art critics, who in a singular melding of personalities and proclivities, projected onto
Florence and its surroundings the utopian ideal of a perennial Renaissance.