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Process on Paper: Drawings from Charles Bregler's Thomas Eakins Collection at the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts

 

The Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts will feature an exhibition of over thirty Thomas Eakins drawings and oil studies from the landmark Charles Bregler Collection October 6, 2001 through January 6, 2002. Long considered one of America's most influential late-nineteenth-century artists, Eakins (1844-1916) is acclaimed for his extraordinary skill as a figure painter and portraitist. This special display, drawn entirely from the Academy's permanent holdings and organized to complement the Eakins retrospective at the Philadelphia Museum of Art, reveals the critical significance that drawing played in the artist's creative process.

Eakins never executed a single drawing intended for public display or purchase, yet no medium was more central to his artistic practice. Almost every effort during the first few decades of his career began with studies in graphite, charcoal, or pen, and Eakins continued to draw at the end of his life, even when his mastery of painting was so profound that preparatory studies would have seemed unnecessary. This reliance on drawing can be traced to his early home life and artistic training in Philadelphia. (left: Mechanical Drawing: Three Spirals, 1860-61, pen and ink, wash and graphite on paper)

The native-born artist grew up surrounded by the decorative work of his father -- a calligrapher and penmanship instructor -- from whom he received drafting instruction at an early age. As a student at Central High School, Eakins studied penmanship and learned the techniques of mechanical and perspectival drawing. From 1862 to 1866, he trained at the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, where he drew from the Academy's plaster casts of classical sculptures and attended lectures on anatomy, before advancing to the life-drawing class. Three years of additional study at the École des Beaux-Arts, in Paris, led Eakins to embrace oil as his primary medium, though, drawing remained a constant in his working method. Through this early training Eakins learned to master such compositional elements as tone, texture, and gesture as well as an acute understanding of the human body, which would become the primary focus of his work throughout his life. As professor and then director of the Academy's school, from 1879 to 1886, Eakins established a rigorous program of study that led to the institution's reputation for offering the most "radical" form of art instruction in the country.

Prior to the Academy's 1985 acquisition of the Bregler collection -- formed by one of the most devoted of Eakins's students -- little was known of the centrality of drawing in the artist's production. Process on Paper surveys this theme through rarely displayed examples of Eakins's mechanical, anatomical, and compositional studies, including the so-called Spanish Sketchbook, dating from his European student years. As the institution most closely associated with Eakins and one whose identity continues to be shaped by his legacy, the Academy honors its illustrious former student and faculty member through an exhibition that underlines the critical methods and aims of his art.

Process on Paper was guest curated by the Eakins scholar Amy B. Werbel, Associate Professor of Fine Arts at Saint Michael's College, Colchester, Vermont, and co-organized by the Robert Hull Fleming Museum, Burlington, Vermont, where it was seen last winter, and the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts.

Please see our earlier article Process on Paper: Drawings by Thomas Eakins from the Charles Bregler Collection of the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts (2/12/01). This article is accompanied with a catalogue essay by Amy Werbel, Associate Professor of Fine Arts at St. Michael's College in Colchester, VT

Read more articles and essays concerning this institutional source by visiting the sub-index page for the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts in Resource Library Magazine

For further biographical information please see America's Distinguished Artists, a national registry of historic artists.


This page was originally published in Resource Library Magazine. Please see Resource Library's Overview section for more information. rev. 6/7/11

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