Showing posts with label Mary Nimmo Moran. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mary Nimmo Moran. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 19, 2014

Original etchings by American Artists

I’ve posted before about Sylvester Rosa Koehler and his role as godfather of the American Etching Revival – the revival that consolidated (in the late 1870s and 1880s) around the New York Etching Club. Now I have a copy of one of his rarest and most sought-after publications, Original Etchings by American Artists, published in 1883 by Cassell and Company. There is no indication that I can see of any limitation, but the print-run must have been quite small, both because the book is so rare now and because it is very large and would have inevitably have been extremely expensive when issued. I say book, but my copy has completely disintegrated, mostly through time, and also because 4 of the 20 original etchings have been previously removed. Luckily, the remaining etchings are all in very good condition, and I also have all of Koehler’s informative if sometimes rather waffly text. The four missing plates are The Inner Harbor, Gloucester by Stephen Parrish; The Ponte Vecchio by Joseph Pennell; A Cloudy Day in Venice by Samuel Colman; and A Tower of Cortes by Thomas Moran. Fortunately the rest of the Moran clan have been left for me, so I have a highly atmospheric Long Island landscape by Thomas’s wife Mary Nimmo Moran (with a wincingly twee title, taken from a Scottish ballad), and a true masterpiece by his brother Peter, Harvest at San Juan, New Mexico.

Mary Nimmo Moran, "'Tween the Gloamin' and the Mirk, When the Kye Come Hame"
Etching, 1883

Henry Farrer, Winter Evening
Etching, 1883

John Austin Sands Monks, Twilight
Etching, 1883

Of the three twilight scenes above, that of Mary Nimmo Moran is my favourite. Despite the Scottish title, the scene is on Long Island, where Thomas and Mary Nimmo Moran habitually spent their summers.

Kruseman van Elten, The Deserted Mill
Etching, 1883

R. Swain Gifford, The Mouth of the Apponigansett
Etching, 1883

James D. Smillie, At Marblehead Neck
(also known as A Bit at Marblehead Neck)
Etching, 1883

James Craig Nicoll, The Smugglers' Landing Place
Etching, 1883

George H. Smillie, An Old New England Orchard
Etching, 1883

J. Foxcroft Cole, The Three Cows
Etching, 1883

Original Etchings by American Artists shows a snapshot of American printmaking at a crucial time; all of the etchings were made especially for this work, and many are dated 1883 in the plate. The artistic and technical skill on display is very impressive, even if Koehler’s insistence that each etching is a masterpiece needs to be taken with a pinch of salt. Impressionism hasn’t yet made any impact, and the key influence on the American landscapes, which predominate, is the plein-air Barbizon School. There are a couple of whimsical subjects: Church’s take on an Aesop fable and Gaugengigl’s faux-Meissonier fiddler. There are also four European scenes, one in Florence and one in Venice that have been removed, plus scenes in London and the Hague by Platt and de Haas. Of these, Platt's Whistler-esque scene of barges on the Thames at Woolwich seems to me particularly noteworthy.

Frederick Stuart Church, The Lion in Love
Etching, 1883

Ignaz Marcel Gaugengigl, And Drive Dull Care Away
Etching, 1883

Charles Adams Platt, Canal Boats on the Thames
Etching, 1883

Mauritz Frederick Hendrik de Haas, Fishing Boats on the Beach at Scheveningen
Etching, 1883

There are also three plates of particular interest for American social life and culture rather than landscape. Frederick Dielman’s The Mora Players, shows Italian immigrant children playing the ancient finger-counting game of mora or morra, in which the winner is the one who correctly guesses the total number of fingers simultaneously displayed by the two players. Koehler writes, “Italian bootblacks playing ‘mora,’ and yet a thoroughly American scene, enacted on a New York sidewalk!”

Frederick Dielman, The Mora Players
Etching, 1883

Thomas Waterson Wood, His Own Doctor
Etching, 1883

Thomas Waterson Wood’s His Own Doctor shows “an exhorter in a Methodist church and a ‘professor’ of white-washing” self-medicating against a fever. Wood’s African-American scenes show him to have had a keen sympathy with his subjects. However, to me his portrait of an infirm elderly African-American overplays the comic element. The hint of caricature detracts from the sharp observation of details such as the quilt robe.

Peter Moran Harvest at San Juan, New Mexico
(also known as Threshing Grain at San Juan Pueblo, New Mexico Territory)
Etching, 1883

Peter Moran’s Harvest at San Juan is to me an incredibly beautiful, important, and moving work. Peter Moran was one of the first artists to come to terms with the American Southwest, and in this etching he responds with grace and respect to the ancient cultures of the Pueblos. There is nothing here of the comedy to be found in Thomas Waterman Wood’s His Own Doctor. Nor is there any false romanticism. Sentimentality and guilt have no place in this etching, which focuses completely on the spiritual weight of the here and now. The centripetal force of this composition intrigues and delights me. Sylvester Rosa Kohler explains the scene thus: “The Indians use horses instead of oxen to thresh their wheat, and they are just driving them into the threshing circle indicated by the upright poles. The ground occupied by the horses is the cleaning floor, the raised ground which forms part of a circle in the foreground, is the earth banked up in levelling the floor, and the refuse of several years threshing.” Peter Moran seems to have instinctually understood that he was observing something with more meaning than a simple harvest, for he invests the scene with a thrilling sense of significance. The traditional method of threshing depicted seems to have been discontinued from 1920, replaced by the use of a threshing machine.

The setting for Harvest at San Juan is the New Mexican Pueblo now officially known by its Tewa name of Ohkay Owingeh (“place of the strong people”). This was the birthplace of the great 17th-century Pueblo spiritual and political leader Po’pay (or Popé), who briefly united the Pueblos against Spanish rule. I have, quite separately from my print collecting and dealing, a strong interest in Native American culture, and Peter Moran’s etching speaks eloquently to me—as eloquently as the Tewa “Song of the Sky Loom”, as translated by Herbert Joseph Spinden in his Songs of the Tewa:

Oh our Mother the Earth, oh our Father the Sky,
Your children are we, and with tired backs
We bring you the gifts that you love.
Then weave for us a garment of brightness;
May the warp be the white light of morning,
May the weft be the red light of evening,
May the fringes be the falling rain,
May the border be the standing rainbow.
Thus weave for us a garment of brightness
That we may walk fittingly where birds sing,
That we may walk fittingly where grass is green,
Oh our Mother the Earth, oh our Father the Sky!

Thursday, April 7, 2011

New York Etching Club: The Moran clan

Today, the best-known figure of the American Painter-Etcher movement is undoubtedly Thomas Moran. Along with his wife Mary Nimmo Moran and brother Peter Moran, Thomas was a towering figure in American art - so much so that he even had a mountain named after him, Mount Moran in Wyoming. Although they were members of the New York Etching Club and its offshoot the American Society of Etchers, the Morans were based in Philadelphia, and stood a little aside from the core coterie of New York etchers. My sole etching by Thomas Moran is one of the most dramatic and striking of all the American etchings of the 1870s/1880s that I have seen. I believe the title of it is The Sounding Sea. Moran's 1884 painting The Much-Resounding Sea is now in the National Gallery of Art in Washington; he also made an etching after this painting, which is reproduced as plate 47 in Alicia G. Longwell, First Impressions: Nineteenth-Century American Master Prints. This earlier image of breaking waves is much more exciting, in my view, with glimpses of both Hokusai and Courbet in an etching that makes the coast off Long Island as exciting as anything off Japan or France.

Thomas Moran, The Sounding Sea
Etching, 1880

Thomas Sidney Moran was born in Bolton, England, in 1837, but emigrated with his family to the USA in 1844, eventually settling in Crescentville, Pennsylvania. The young Thomas showed a talent for drawing, and was apprenticed to a Philadelphia wood-engraving firm, Scattergood and Telfer, from 1853-55, during which time Thomas learned to paint in oils and watercolour under the tutelage of his elder brother Edward Moran. In 1862 Edward and Thomas travelled to England, where their encounter with the art of Turner had a profound effect on Thomas Moran's artistic formation. Thomas Moran was elected an Academician of the National Academy of Design in 1884. Moran made his first etching in 1856, but did not take it up seriously until 1878. In all he made around 100 etchings, alongside his many paintings of the American landscape. He died in 1926.

Mary Nimmo Moran, Conwy Castle, Wales
Etching, 1885

As soon as Thomas had mastered the art he taught it to his wife, the artist Mary Nimmo Moran. Mary Nimmo was born in Strathavon, Scotland, in 1842, but emigrated to the USA in 1847. The Nimmo family settled in Crescentville, Pennsylvania. There Mary met Thomas Moran, five years her senior, who was the son of the Nimmo family's neighbours. Mary took art lessons with Thomas from the age of 18, and married him two years later. Homemaking and taking care of their three children stopped Mary continuing with her painting, but in 1879 Thomas taught her how to etch. Mary proved an apt pupil, and became celebrated as "the most prominent of the (American) women etchers in the late nineteenth century". Mary Nimmo Moran was elected to the Society of Painter-Etchers of New York, and was the only woman among the 65 original Fellows of the Royal Society of Painter-Etchers in London. John Ruskin was among those who collected and praised her prints, which were regarded by critics as on a par with those of her husband. Nevertheless Mary worked as M. Nimmo Moran, to avoid unsettling the buying public by declaring her gender too openly. From 1884 till her death from typhoid fever in 1899, Mary and Thomas Moran lived on Long Island, which furnished the motifs for many of Mary Nimmo Moran's etchings.

Peter Moran, The Noonday Rest
Etching, 1877

Peter Moran, Landscape and Cattle
Etching after Émile van Marcke de Lummen, 1889

Peter Moran was the youngest of the three Moran brothers, born in 1841. Like his brothers, Peter Moran was born in England, but emigrated to the USA in 1844. Peter Moran was apprenticed at the age of 16 to the firm of lithographic printers Herline and Hersel, for whom he drew advertisements. The following year he began to study with his brothers Edward and Thomas. Peter Moran is particularly noted for his landscapes with cattle, which show the influence of Rosa Bonheur and Constant Troyon, and for his scenes of Pueblo life in New Mexico. Peter Moran was married to the artist Emily Moran, and taught painting and etching at the Philadelphia School of Design for Women. He died in 1914.

Stephen J. Ferris, Mrs. Philip Nicklin
Etching after Gilbert Stuart, 1879

Stephen J. Ferris, Mrs J. Coleman Drayton
Etching after Daniel Huntington, 1881


Stephen J. Ferris, Devil's Way, Algiers
Etching after Adolphe Mouilleron, 1879

Stephen J. Ferris, The Old-Clothes Dealer, Cairo
Etching after Jean-Léon Gérôme, 1880

The influential Moran clan was further extended by the marriage of Elizabeth Moran, sister to the three brothers, to the artist Stephen J. Ferris. Stephen James Ferris was a highly-accomplished etcher who devoted himself chiefly to interpretational etchings of the paintings of others - or, at least, I haven't come across any original works by him. He was born in Plattsburg, N.Y., in 1835, and studied at the Pennsylvania Academy and then in Paris under Gérôme. Stephen and Elizabeth named their son after this teacher, and Jean Leon Gerome Ferris also became a notable etcher.