This
undated handout image provided by the Smithsonian American Art Museum
shows Frederic Edwin Church's 1861 oil on paper, "Our Banner in the
Sky," part of a major exhibition on how artists represented the Civil
War and how the war changed art. The piece is on view in Washington now
through April and then moves to New York's Metropolitan Museum of Art.
WASHINGTON
(AP) — Paintings and photographs depicting the raw reality of the Civil
War marked a major change in American art that tossed out romantic
notions of war.
Some of the finest artists of the day, including
Winslow Homer, Eastman Johnson, Frederic Church and Sanford Gifford,
painted landscapes and scenes of everyday life to show how the war
transformed the nation. Their best works, along with some of the first
photographs of soldiers killed on the battlefield, have been gathered by
the Smithsonian American Art Museum for a major exhibition on how
artists represented the war and how the war changed art. “The Civil War
and American Art” is on view in Washington through April and then moves
to New York’s Metropolitan Museum of Art.
Curator Eleanor Jones
Harvey spent years researching the project and borrowing many of the 75
works featured in the show. It features Civil War scenes from
Washington, Baltimore, New York, and points south at Fort Sumter,
Charleston, S.C., Georgia and Virginia.
Rather than make
portraits of war generals and heroes, however, artists of the day
focused on the common man. There was a realization that “art that
presents normal human beings, rather than celebrities and luminaries,
carries more lasting weight.”
One painting in the show, Gifford’s
1862 painting “Preaching to the Troops,” depicting a scene near
Washington, was displayed in the Oval Office for 13 years.
Photographs
had perhaps the greatest impact on art of the era. Battlefield
photographs by Alexander Gardner showing piles of dead soldiers and
images by George Barnard showing Charleston in ruins destroyed any
romantic notions of war being a heroic adventure. Such images were shown
in art galleries in the Northeast during the war and made people
realize “this is not what I signed up for,” Harvey said.
“Photographs
from Antietam make it stunningly impossible for anyone associated with
the New York art world to make romantic pictures of the war because they
look like lies,” Harvey said.
Art also changed the rhetoric
about war by depicting gruesome reality. Raw imagery shown to President
Abraham Lincoln likely influenced the words he drafted for his
Gettysburg Address, Harvey said.
“There’s a realization that this
is a war that left nobody unscathed,” she said. “As a result, as rich
as you are, there is no insulation from the impact of the war.”
Landscape
paintings reflected the mood of the nation. Artists depicted scenes of
nature and weather to represent the war’s destruction and impact. There
are layers of coding in such paintings, Harvey said, as with Church’s
depiction of ice as Northern fortitude, an erupting volcano to represent
slavery and the tropics to represent the South.
At the same
time, Homer and Johnson addressed slavery and emancipation with scenes
of ordinary people, including a slave family escaping to freedom on
horseback and a slave man reading from the Bible.
In postwar
America, Homer painted a scene of former slaves meeting with their
former mistress, renegotiating their relationship to involve wages.
“Homer is saying, ‘until this gets fixed, we’re not done,’” Harvey said.
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