Skip to Content

“Traces of the Hand: Master Drawings from the Collection of Frederick and Lucy S. Herman” Exhibition Catalogue, with Entries by University of Virginia Students, Edited and Revised by Lawrence O. Goedde

Showing 1 of 5


  FILTER RESULTS

Croton on the Hudson

1868
North America, United States

Asher Brown Durand (Jefferson, New Jersey, 1796 - 1886, Maplewood, New Jersey)

19th century CE
Pen and ink on paper, 10 1/4 x 14 1/8 in.
Gift of The Frederick and Lucy S. Herman Foundation, 2006.11.18

Object Type: Drawing and Watercolor

Goedde Class
Traces of the Hand: Master Drawings from the Collection of Frederic and Lucy S. Herman | January 25, 2013 - May 26, 2013

Asher Brown Durand
American, 1796 - 1886
Croton on the Hudson, 1868
Pen and ink, 10 1½4 x 14 1/8 in (26.04 x 35.88 cm) (sheet)
Inscription: (recto) lower right in pen: “Croton on the Hudson/Sept 22, “68”; signature: “A.B. Durand”
Provenance: Acquired from the Auslew Gallery, Norfolk, 1966
Gift of The Frederick and Lucy S. Herman Foundation, 2006.11.18

Asher Brown Durand’s drawing depicts a small peninsula jutting off Croton Point near Croton-on-Hudson, a village in Westchester County, New York. Durand’s drawn studies often depict specific locations, rendered during summer trips in the Hudson River Valley and New England.1 Durand made this drawing on September 22nd, 1868, probably during his 1868 sketching trip, which he took from July to September, traveling in the Adirondacks in Keene, New York and at Lake George.2 Katelyn Crawford identified the precise location from Julie Hart Beer’s painting of the same scene dated 1869, just a year later.3

Although no other pen drawings by Durand are published, the signature and inscription are consistent with the artist’s numerous pencil sketches made throughout his career. Durand’s meticulous technique in this drawing no doubt derived from skills he developed as one of America’s premier engravers, prior to his becoming a painter in the 1830s, best known as the founder and leader of the Hudson River School.4 By 1868, Durand worked in a developed style and defined set of subjects, drawing expressive trees in pencil, pressing heavily to create dense masses of foliage and using soft, slanted strokes to suggest changes in the leaves.5 The Herman drawing, in contrast, showcases skills Durand acquired as an engraver, using delicate hatching and cross-hatching to render light and shadow and short, abrupt lines to define the foliage.

Drawing occupied an important place in Durand’s creative process, which he described in nine “Letters on Landscape Painting,” published in 1855 in The Crayon. Addressed to young artists, these letters define his method for painting culled from the working methods of Thomas Cole, John Constable, and John Ruskin.6 In his second letter Durand emphasized drawing as the basis of landscape painting, encouraging young artists to “take pencil and paper, not the palette and brushes, and draw with scrupulous fidelity the outlines or contour of such objects as you shall select…slovenly and imperfect drawing finds but a miserable compensation in the palpable efforts to disguise and atone for it, by the blandishments of color and effect.”7 The Herman drawing, like Durand’s many pencil studies, shows his allegiance in practice to these principles.

Andy Mullan
Katelyn Crawford
Jayna McGehee


1 Barbara Gallati, “Asher B. Durand,” in John K. Howat, ed., American Paradise: The World of the Hudson River School, New York, 1987, 107-108.
2Linda Ferber, Kindred Spirits: Asher B. Durand and the American Landscape, New York: Brooklyn Museum of Art, 2007, 221.
3With Hawthorne Fine Art, New York, NY, in 2009.
4Barbara Gallati, An Engraver’s and a Farmer’s Art, Yonkers, NY: The Hudson River Museum, 1983, 62-63.
5Jo Miller, Drawings of the Hudson River School, 1825-1875, New York: Brooklyn Museum of Art, 1969, 60.
6Eleanor Jones Harvey, The Painted Sketch: American Impressions from Nature, 1830-1880, Dallas Museum of Art, 1998, 17.
7Durand, “Letters on Landscape Painting!!,” The Crayon, 10 January 1855; as quoted in Harvey, Painted Sketch, 37.


Bibliography
Gallati, Barbara. Asher B. Durand: An Engraver’s and a Farmer’s Art. Yonkers, New York: The Hudson River Museum, 1983.

Keywords Click a term to view the records with the same keyword

Additional Images Click an image to view a larger version

Exhibition List
This object was included in the following exhibitions:

Portfolio List Click a portfolio name to view all the objects in that portfolio
This object is a member of the following portfolios:


Your current search criteria is: Portfolio is "“Traces of the Hand: Master Drawings from the Collection of Frederick and Lucy S. Herman” Exhibition Catalogue, with Entries by University of Virginia Students, Edited and Revised by Lawrence O. Goedde" and [Objects]CurGeoPlaName is "United States".