Os Icebergs (The Icebergs) - Frederic Edwin Church
Dallas Museum of Art, Dallas, Estados Unidos
OST - 163x285 - 1861
The Icebergs is
a superb example of Frederic Edwin Church’s technical skill and clever
marketing. The seductively inviting colors, glowing subterranean light, and
glossy, tactile surfaces of the icebergs attract the viewer’s eye. Yet in
reality, the scene is an inhospitable place filled with danger, as the broken
mast in the foreground indicates.
In 1859, Church chartered a month long expedition in the North
Atlantic, off the Canadian coasts of Newfoundland and Labrador. He spent
several weeks on a sixty-five ton schooner and used a small rowboat to venture
over the deadly waters and closely study the forms and colors of icebergs in
the Arctic landscape.
After returning to his New York City studio, Church relied on
nearly one hundred pencil and oil sketches to create a large-scale painting of
icebergs. As with his earlier blockbuster landscape, The
Heart of the Andes (1859, Metropolitan Museum of Art), he
paired his on-site observations with his imagination. His goal was to capture
both the essence of his experiences among icebergs and the other-worldly sense
of the Arctic environment, drawn from explorers’ written accounts and
contemporary reports. The process took him less than six months, and The
Icebergs was first exhibited in 1861.
Twelve days after the attack on Fort Sumter ignited the
American Civil War, The Icebergs debuted in
New York on April 24, 1861. While on view in the U.S., Church’s painting was
titled The North, and all exhibition proceeds were donated
the Union’s Patriotic Fund (today’s Red Cross). From New York , it traveled to
Boston and continued to receive ardent praise from American audiences.
Unfortunately, the war made buyers for such a monumental work hard to find. In
1863, Church decided to send the work to London, where he had a strong
following and had profitably exhibited The Heart of the Andes as
well as Niagara (1857, Corcoran Gallery of Art).
For its display, Church arranged to have The
Icebergs draped in crimson and installed by itself in an
opulently appointed room. Viewers paid a quarter to see the painting and
received a printed broadside (descriptive essay) that gave an introduction to
the unfamiliar vista. The text emphasized the various glacial features and
dazzling optical effects on display.
During the preparations for sending the work abroad, Church
altered it in two ways: a new title and the addition of a mast in the
foreground. In deference to England’s support of the Confederate side of the
Civil War, Church changed the title from The North to The
Icebergs. (For many Americans, the Arctic North and the Union North
were inextricably intertwined.) His exact reasons for the inclusion of the
broken mast are unknown. The mast may refer to Sir John Franklin’s doomed
expedition to the Northwest Passage, but it also served to establish scale in
the painting. Several preliminary studies of the painting that include the mast
as well as a full-scale boat indicate that Church struggled to adequately
convey the immensity of the subject.
The work was well-received in England and soon purchased by Sir
Edward William Watkin (1819-1901), a railroad magnate and member of Parliament.
Apart from six years (1915-1921) when it hung in a nearby church, The
Icebergs remained at Rose Hill, Watkin's estate in Northenden,
outside of Manchester. The property changed hands several times until Rose Hill
and its unrecognized artistic treasure were acquired by the City of Manchester
to house a social services facility for boys. In 1978, Mair Baulch, the matron
of the juvenile detention facility, brought the painting into public view in
hopes of raising money to purchase a run-down piece of land for the boys’
recreation. Her hopes were far exceeded when, in 1979, The
Icebergs sold at Sotheby’s for a price that broke all existing
auction records for American paintings. It was immediately donated to the
Dallas Museum of Art by an anonymous benefactor, revealed in 2010 to be Lamar
and Norma Hunt of Dallas.
The Icebergs is an 1861 oil painting by the American
landscape artist Frederic Edwin Church. It was inspired by
his 1859 voyage to the North
Atlantic around Newfoundland and Labrador. Considered one
of Church's "Great Pictures"—measuring 1.64 by 2.85 metres (5.4 by
9.4 feet)—the painting depicts one or more icebergs in
the afternoon light of the Arctic. It was first displayed in New York City in 1861, where
visitors paid 25 cents' admittance to the one-painting show. Similar
exhibitions in Boston and London followed. The unconventional landscape of ice,
water, and sky generally drew praise, but the American Civil War, which began the same year,
lessened critical and popular interest in New York City's cultural events.
The painting became popular within Church's oeuvre and inspired
other landscape artists' interest in the Arctic, but its apparent lack of
narrative or allegory perplexed some viewers. Between exhibitions in the US and
England, Church added the ship mast to the painting, and retitled the work from
its original The North. He eventually sold the painting in England, where
it disappeared from the art-world's awareness after the buyer's death in 1901.
In 1979, the painting, which a number of New York City galleries were now
hunting, was rediscovered in a home in Manchester,
England, where it had remained for most of the intervening 78 years. It was
soon put to auction in New York City, drawing significant interest as its sale
coincided with renewed critical interest in Church, who had been largely
forgotten in the 20th century. The Icebergs was auctioned for US$2.5
million, the most of any American painting to that point. The buyers, later
identified as businessman Lamar Hunt and
his wife Norma, donated the canvas to the Dallas Museum of Art, where it remains
today.
Church painted The Icebergs at a time of general
interest in Arctic exploration. The disappearance of the
expedition of British explorer John Franklin,
who had planned to navigate the Northwest
Passage, was a popular press topic in the 1850s. In 1856 the
American explorer Elisha Kane published an account of his
own expedition to determine Franklin's fate. Francis Leopold McClintock finally
uncovered the fate of Franklin and his crew, which
he described in an 1859 book. Church too was interested in the Arctic, and in
science and geography. He was a member of the American Geographical and Statistical Society,
where the Arctic explorer Isaac Israel Hayes had lectured, and in
1859 he journeyed to the Arctic himself. Hayes, a friend of Church, named an
Arctic peak at the Kennedy Channel after Church in the summer
of 1861. As Church scholar David C. Huntington wrote, "By going north
in 1859 Church was both following and leading the public mind.... Church had a
democratic genius for embodying the archetype of the immediate and immediately
present. His artistic hand responded to the moment's aggregate curiosity."
In June 1859, Church and his friend the writer Louis Legrand
Noble took a steamship from Halifax, Nova Scotia to St. John's, Newfoundland and Labrador.
For about a month they traveled in the area of Cape Race and
along the Avalon Peninsula. They chartered a
schooner to approach the sea ice, and Church used a rowboat to get close to the icebergs,
making sketches in pencil and oil while enduring sea-sickness. He produced
about one hundred sketches, ranging from small pencil drawings to atmospheric
oil studies. Returning to New York, he painted Twilight in the Wilderness (1860)
before committing to The Icebergs, which took about six months, in the
winter of 1860. Church was then at the height of his fame, and newspapers regularly
updated the public on the progress of the painting. Noble documented their
voyage in his book After Icebergs with a Painter, which was published to
coincide with the exhibition of The Icebergs.
Church produced a number of advanced studies as he searched for
the most favorable composition, relying on intuition. A landscape depicting
just ice, water, and sky was unconventional and its composition a
"hazardous experiment", according to his contemporary, the
writer Henry Tuckerman, with "little scope for
general effect". Church told his agent that he was pleased with the canvas
as he neared completion.
Shortly before the first exhibition, the American Civil War began. Church decided
to call the painting The North, a title with a double meaning: a picture
of the Arctic and a patriotic reference to the northern Union. Advertisements for the exhibition
noted that the admission proceeds would be donated to the Patriotic Fund, which
supported Union soldiers' families.
The painting is one of Church's composite views, like his
popular The Heart of the Andes (1859), in which
he combined elements from many sketches with his imagination to convey the
essential character of the setting. This approach to landscape painting
accorded with the ideas of his aesthetic influences: Alexander von Humboldt, the popular
naturalist and science writer who devoted a section of his Kosmos to
landscape art; and John Ruskin, the famous English art critic.
Church's particular challenge was to produce a grand landscape painting of an
environment so limited in form, color, and living things. As the American art
historian Gerald L. Carr writes, "By standards of its day, the composition
was virtually abstract. Much was left to the imagination."
A broadside was prepared to orient
exhibition visitors to the painting. It described the scene in largely
objective terms. Given its lack of figurative language, it may have been
written by Church himself—Louis LeGrand Noble, by contrast, used much
rhetorical flourish in his booklet for The Heart of the Andes. The
broadside begins by orienting the viewer to the scene as a whole:
“The spectator is supposed to be standing on the ice, in a bay
of the berg. The several masses are parts of one immense berg. Imagine an
amphitheatre, upon the lower steps of which you stand, and see the icy
foreground at your feet, and gaze upon the surrounding masses, all uniting in
one beneath the surface of the sea. To the left is overhanging, precipitous
ice; to the right is a part of the upper surface of the berg. To that succeeds
an inner gorge, running up between Alpine peaks. In front is the main portion
of the berg, exhibiting ice-architecture in its vaster proportions. Thus the
beholder has around him the manifold forms of the huge Greenland glacier after
it has been launched upon the deep, and subjected, for a time, to the action of
the elements—waves and currents, sunshine and storm.”
The Icebergs' play of light is highly detailed, with the
afternoon sun somewhere at left casting shadows in blues, purples, and
pinks, and the ice and water interacting in complex reflections, especially by
the grotto. The viewer's eye is less likely to move vertically, from foreground
to background, as it would in most landscape paintings, than to zig-zag. The
likely starting point, the ship's mast, seems to point to the boulder and
grotto at right, which in turn is oriented toward the large iceberg dominating
the background. The boulder and ice around the grotto are painted with impasto,
while Church otherwise conceals his brushstrokes. This more turbulent area with
its variety of color creates a "material play between surface and
depth", according to art historian Jennifer Raab.
A boulder rests on the ice shelf above the grotto and stains
the ice a rust color. It serves as a reminder that the iceberg once made
contact with land, and stands as a reference to the geological notions of the
day, such as Louis Agassiz's
theory of the ice age, and Charles Lyell's
theory of "continental lift". The general topic of unusually placed
("erratic") boulders was a matter of significant debate at the time. Art
historian Timothy Mitchell writes that "The Icebergs is an exultant
tribute to time's slow changes. But ... the scientific ideas that
informed The Icebergs have long since been discounted by geologists
and forgotten by the public. As a consequence, [the painting's] association
with the geological process is often overlooked."
The shapes in the ice sometimes form profiles of human-like
faces, most pronounced in the repoussoir of
ice on the left. As described by Carr, there are also intentional "vague
humanoid profiles" on the right, "skull-like" ice blocks in the
foreground, and a "floating ice-'siren'" near the grotto. In the
foreground, melted water is a light blue, and at upper left a small waterfall
deposits water into a patch of emerald beneath. Church observed that freshly
frozen water within the cracks of icebergs produced a striking blue color;
these veins of sapphire are illustrated at left. In the distance, the largest
iceberg shows old waterlines, indicating its continuing ascent, and the
foreground appears wetter, having risen from the ocean more recently. Church's
signature is on the block of ice to the left of the mast, which was painted in
later, and may be seen to form a crucifix. Carr notes that the water level in
the grotto is not consistent with that of the rest of the painting.
Like Church's previous "great pictures", The
Icebergs received a single-painting exhibition with an admission fee of 25
cents. It debuted in New York City at Goupil's from
April 24 to July 9, 1861, and moved to the Boston Athenæum the next year. The
exhibition rooms were prepared theatrically; the painting, itself 1.64 m
× 2.85 m (5.4 ft × 9.4 ft), had a massive carved
frame, and the room had emerald carpet and maroon divans and
wall-cloths. The outbreak of the Civil War put a damper on exhibition
attendance, as New York World observed on April 29:
"Upon ordinary occasions a new picture by Mr. Church would be for a time
an object of central attention to the cultivated community of New York. At
present the war excitement absorbs every other, and the picture of the
'Icebergs' has been placed on view at Goupil's without attracting special
attention. Last year the announcement of such a work would have packed the
gallery from morning till night for weeks; now so intense and eager is the
interest concentrated upon the capital, the movements of forces, and the
pageantry wherein the town has draped itself, that we doubt if any considerable
number of our citizens are aware of its exhibition..."
Church's paintings were greatly anticipated, any many critics
responded positively to The Icebergs. The New-York Daily Tribune called
it "the most splendid work of art that has as yet been produced in this
country.... It is an absolutely wonderful picture, a work of genius that
illustrates the time and the country producing it." While The Icebergs was
well received, some critics had difficulty relating to the painting. Some
resorted to the imaginative, suggesting that the cavern or grotto was the
"haunt" of fairies, sirens, or mermaids. In its original form,
as seen in the US, the ship's mast had
not yet been painted in; thus the painting had no narrative possibility or
easily observed meaning. The Albion warned that "ordinary
observers ... may perhaps experience some slight disappointment when they miss
all familiar objects and find no trace whatever of human association ... no
connecting link of any sort between themselves and the canvas." The New
York World wrote, "We shall be surprised if those of acute
sensibilities do not look upon it at first with a positive feeling of pain,
akin to that which we sometimes feel in the presence of the terrible visions of
sleep.... The picture is above and beyond criticism ... We think it will require
some time to get even on speaking terms with the Icebergs”. Church did not find
an American buyer, so the work sat in his Tenth Street studio for some time
after the east-coast exhibitions.
Jennifer Raab writes that what disturbed viewers of The
Icebergs was its emptiness. Church's previous landscapes related nature
with humanity, often via religious symbols. A picture of barren ice offered
only solitude—"not Romantic solitude, but rather nature apart from man,
shaped by gravity and entropy, resistant to symbolism. This was nature
'uncaring'; this was Darwin's nature." In Raab's analysis of the
picture, its limited use of symbols leaves the viewer unable to resort to
allegorical readings like those commonly found in the work of Thomas Cole,
Church's teacher. Even the addition of the ship's mast is not enough to
establish a narrative, according to Raab: "The Icebergs sets us up to
construct a story, and yet the picture is more like Church's broadside:
an ekphrastic description
in which details are not treated hierarchically in terms of their value for the
narrative."
Before the canvas was exhibited in London in June 1863, Church
renamed it The Icebergs, and added the ship's mast. The mast provides
a sense of scale and is a concession to viewers who found the painting lacking
in symbolism; English viewers might now have seen it as a tribute to Franklin's
expedition. A chromolithograph was made in 1864; Church
had put off this reproduction in the US based on the painting's reception. The
canvas was well-received in London. Attending a preview for the painting were
scientists and luminaries of Arctic expedition such as John Tyndall, Jane Franklin (second
wife of the deceased John), Francis McClintock, John Rae, George Back, Edward
Belcher, and Richard
Collinson.
The Icebergs was purchased by Edward Watkin,
a British member of parliament and businessman
who played a role in the development of a trans-continental North American
railroad. The asking price is unknown, but was probably in the range of $10,000
to $11,500. Watkin hung the painting at his home, Rose Hill, now part of Manchester,
England. This was the first and only time that Church found a British
patron, although he had tried before.
Huntington, whose writing in the 1960s sought to explain the
earlier fascination with a then-forgotten artist, explained Church's intentions
and the meaning of a landscape of icebergs to a 19th-century American audience:
"These grand, mysterious, elemental creatures of the forces were
Church's Moby Dycks [sic]. But, as anyone who has read Melville will
realize, there is a fundamental difference between the two men. The writer
sought to tell his fellow-men that their powers were finite. The painter sought
to tell his fellow-men that their powers were infinite. It is the difference
between profound Irony and profound Hope.... In 1859, Church's posture before
the world was one of absolute confidence."
Other artists were encouraged by the popular exhibition
of The Icebergs to create their own Arctic pictures. In the US,
marine artist William Bradford travelled to the
North Atlantic a number of times beginning in 1861. Bradford was already
interested in the Arctic, but Church's painting became an impetus for his
career as an Arctic explorer, lecturer, and artist. His Arctic and iceberg
paintings were exhibited in the US, England, and Germany. Albert
Bierstadt made a number of iceberg paintings into the 1880s,
and Thomas Moran produced Spectres of the
North in 1891. The exhibitions of The Icebergs in England
probably influenced Edwin Landseer's 1864 painting, Man Proposes, God Disposes, which depicts
two polar bears tearing at a wreckage that would evoke the lost Franklin
expedition.
In 1865, Church returned to the northern theme in a major
painting, Aurora Borealis, which, together with
his Cotopaxi and Chimborazo, was shown in
London that year in a three-painting exhibition. In 1863 he produced a
smaller canvas of The Icebergs, then called To Illumine the Iceberg (29
× 47 cm), for patron Samuel
Hallett, who paid $300; it is likely the same painting known
as The Iceberg and now in the collection of the Mattatuck
Museum, Waterbury, Connecticut.
Following the death of Watkin in 1901, The Icebergs, as
art historian Eleanor Harvey put it, "more or
less sank from sight for three quarters of a century". Rose Hill had
become a boys' home, where the painting remained hanging all the while in a
little-visited upper landing (but for a six-year gap when the painting was
donated to a church, which eventually returned it after it obstructed a local
drama club's production). Meanwhile, the American art market lost interest in
Church and the Hudson River School. As interest increased
in the 1970s, at least two American art dealers began to search for Church's
"lost" painting, the lithograph of which had appeared on the cover of
a 1966 book about Church in case it might help locate the painting. Both
dealers came very close to locating it—some confusion arose from an 1867 report
by Henry Tuckerman that a "Mr. Watson,
M.P." had purchased the painting, which was "corrected" to
"Watkins" by a Boston paper in 1890; these were all valid surnames of
potential M.P.s. One investigator ended their journey at a nearby house, and
another identified Rose Hill as a likely location, but was discouraged from
trying to access the facility. Instead, she spoke by phone with the matron,
Mair Baulch, who did not know about the painting in the home. The next year,
Baulch independently investigated the painting when she was looking to raise
£14,000 for another property. She inquired by letter to the Art Institute of Chicago, which she had
once visited, and got as far as negotiating a price. The Manchester City Council by this time
intervened, identifying the painting as city property, and refused the Art
Institute's first offer. Instead, a city manager contacted Sotheby's in
London, and the painting was transferred to the Manchester City Art Gallery. The gallery
wanted to keep the painting, but Sotheby's estimate of $500,000 was too
significant to ignore.
The painting was shipped to Sotheby's in New York City, where
it was confirmed to be in excellent condition, needing only cleaning with soap
and water, removal of varnish, and adjustments to the stretchers. The
importance of the painting drew more sellers to Sotheby's planned auction,
hoping to capitalize on the increasing interest in the semi-annual event. On
October 25, 1979, eight to ten bidders participated in the auction of The
Icebergs, which lasted almost four minutes. Two telephone bidders remained at
the $2 million mark, with the winning bid coming at $2.5 million. Not only
was the amount the most ever paid at auction for an American painting—which had
been set the year before, at $980,000 for George Caleb Bingham's The Jolly
Flatboatmen—but it was the third-highest amount paid for any
painting at auction. The Icebergs' record for an American painting
stood until 1985, when Rembrandt
Peale's Rubens Peale with a Geranium sold for
$3.7 million. The anonymous buyers of The Icebergs put it on
long-term loan with the Dallas Museum of Art, and soon donated it
outright. The buyers were identified in 2010 as businessman Lamar Hunt and
his wife Norma, who had been equivocal on the subject in 1979, although
contemporary reporting was quite certain. According to a 1980 magazine
piece, Mair Baulch did not receive any of the sale proceeds to improve her
facility, although Harvey, writing in 2002, noted that the council
"eventually" purchased the property that Baulch was interested in.
The American press was sometimes critical of the painting and its price. In Time magazine, art critic Robert Hughes disparaged Church while commenting on the escalating prices paid for artworks: "If art was once expected to provoke un nouveau frisson, a new kind of shudder, its present function is to become a new type of bullion. Thus, we are told by art industry flacks, people now respect art. They flock to museums to see it; its spiritual value has been confirmed, for millions, by its wondrous convertibility into cash. You can't argue with it. It means something if somebody pays $2.5 million for a lummocking spread of icebergs by Frederic Church, a salon machine whose pedestrian invocations of the sublime are not worth one square foot of a good Turner."
The American press was sometimes critical of the painting and its price. In Time magazine, art critic Robert Hughes disparaged Church while commenting on the escalating prices paid for artworks: "If art was once expected to provoke un nouveau frisson, a new kind of shudder, its present function is to become a new type of bullion. Thus, we are told by art industry flacks, people now respect art. They flock to museums to see it; its spiritual value has been confirmed, for millions, by its wondrous convertibility into cash. You can't argue with it. It means something if somebody pays $2.5 million for a lummocking spread of icebergs by Frederic Church, a salon machine whose pedestrian invocations of the sublime are not worth one square foot of a good Turner."

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