Grace Hudson Museum

(above: entrance to Grace Hudson Museum. Photo courtesy of John Hazeltine. © 2006 John Hazeltine)
Ukiah, CA
707-467-2836
http://www.gracehudsonmuseum.org/
Drawing from Nature: Early Northern California Landscapes
The work of over a dozen talented
landscape painters from the last hundred years glows in an art and history
exhibit organized by the Grace Hudson Museum. Running through January 23,
2000,
"Drawing from Nature: Early Northern California Landscapes" features
the work of artists such as Giuseppe
Leone Cadenasso, Percy Gray,
Lorenzo Latimer, Mary
DeNeale Morgan, Virgil
Williams and Theodore Wores,
and charts the interconnections between these artists. (left: front
cover of exhibition brochure with photograph of Raymond Yelland's landscape
class: School of Design (Hopkins Art Institute), c. 1895, courtesy of
the California Historical Society (FN-23522)
Overarching all is the beauty of Northern California lands at the turn of the last century.
Exhibited paintings and sketches come from both private collectors and institutions such as the Hearst Gallery at St. Mary's College in Moraga and the California Historical Society in San Francisco. Many of the chosen works have never before been on public display. Rounding out the show are historic photos, manuscripts and memorabilia.
Artists in the new exhibit share a link with the organizing Museum's namesake, Grace Carpenter Hudson. Most were either her fellow students or her art instructors at the California School of Design.
Exposure
to art training in the San Francisco Bay Area, either as teacher or student,
proved a defining point in the professional lives of many of the artists
featured in the show. By the outset of the 1870's, artists flocked to San
Francisco, the "Paris of the West," attracted by the area's beautiful
scenery and gentle climate, as well as the generous patronage of San Francisco's
nouveau riche. As early as 1871, a group of these artists had created
a society to bring together "all who have any desire to encourage the
progress of fine arts," the San Francisco Art Association. The all-male
Bohemian Club, with its similar goal of stimulating and improving cultural
life, was formed the following year. Both organizations became the focus
of the city's artistic and literary community. (left: Grace Carpenter
Hudson, Mendocino Streamside, n.d., collection of the Grace Hudson
Museum)
One of tire San Francisco Art Association's principal aims was the founding of an art school, a goal realized with the establishment of the California School of Design in 1874, the first art school west of the Mississippi. One of its early students was Grace Carpenter Hudson, from the rural countryside of California's Mendocino County, who attended from 1880-1884. At that time, the School of Design was the only art school known in the United States or Europe to offer a landscape class in which teachers actually took their students outside to sketch, rather than drawing from already existing work or from memory. Advertisements for the School emphasized its instruction in "drawing from nature."
While Grace Carpenter went on to achieve fame as a painter
of American Indian portraits,
many of her School of Design teachers, fellow classmates
and later colleagues became well-known landscape artists. "Drawing
from Nature" celebrates their artistic achievements. It also honors
their vision of beautiful Northem California, from Lorenzo
Palmer Latimer's stately redwoods to Manuel
Valencia's panoramic view of the Napa River, to the monumental majesty
of Christian Jorgensen's Yosemite pass. (right: Manuel Valencia,
The Alameda Marshes and Oakland Estuary, c. 1888, collection of the
Grace Hudson Museum)
This exhibit is made possible, in part, by the California Arts Council, a state agency, the Sun House Guild, and the Christopher Queen Galleries in Duncans Mills.
Grace
Hudson Museum is located at 431 South Main Street, Ukiah, CA. The Museum
is a division of the City of Ukiah's Department of Community Services. Hours
and fees are available through the museum's website. (left: Winter
view of Grace Hudson Museum. Photo © 1999 Grace Hudson Museum.)
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