Exhibition : Nocturnes
date:Sunday, December 7, 2008 time:11:00 AM to 5:00 PM venue:Wildling Art Museum address:2329 Jonata Street Los Olivos, CA 93441 View map from:Wildling Art Museum
A nocturne is a work of art dealing with evening or night.
The term, associated with the music of Frederic Chopin, was adopted by the
American expatriate artist, James McNeill Whistler, as a title for some of his
crepuscular paintings inspired by the evening light in London that sought tonal
harmonies similar to those in music.
In the last years of the 19th century, the vogue for nocturne paintings grew
among young American artists influenced by Whistler and the French Barbizon
School tonalists. These artists used moody nocturnal paintings to represent
spiritual transcendence, a departure from the naturalism of the Hudson River
School painters who relied on sharp details and recognizable locations. Looking
back nostalgically to colonial times, before the advent of electricity, early
20th century nocturne painters portrayed a world illuminated by firelight,
candlelight, or the full moon.
In 1899 in New York, California artist Charles Rollo Peters (1862-1928)
exhibited a series of sixteen moonlit views of California missions. His
nocturnal paintings had an enormous impact on East Coast painters such as
Frederic Remington, best known for his images of the American West, and young
emerging talent such as DeWitt Parshall (1864-1956) who would ultimately reside
in Santa Barbara. Peters’ nocturne, The Santa Ynez Mission by Moonlight (c.
1915) will be included in the exhibition at the Wildling, along with nocturnes
by Dewitt Parshall, Colin Campbell Cooper, Lockwood de Forest, and Matthew
Rackham Barnes, and by contemporary painters, Thomas Van Stein and Marcia Burtt.
Date : September 21, 2008 - January 4, 2009 .
Time : Wednesday - Sunday at 11 a.m. to 5 p.m.
