Become informed & inspired by artists whose works advanced Western Art History.

The Icebergs

Dallas Museum of Art, Dallas, Texas

Gift of Norma & Lamar Hunt (1979.28) 2010
© Image courtesy of Dallas Museum of Art

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Guidance to Describe:

1. Read Docent’s responses.     2. Look closely to discover details.     3. Describe what you see.

People:

Figures are lacking. Today, people travel aboard cruise ships to explore this majestic environment.

Place:

Newfoundland and/ or Labrador, in the North Atlantic, off the Canadian coast. Church uses earlier sketches, as inspiration for his masterpiece.

Objects & Things:

A mast rests on its side. The tip points to more wooden remnants of the ship. Nature constructs a floating ice cathedral on a sea of shimmering glass. Its reflection can be seen in the flickering glow of dawn.

Guidance to Interpret & Conclude:

1. Read Docent’s Responses.     2. Use accredited sources.     3. Ignite your imagination.

Interpret:

At home, Church adds the remains of the vessel to memorialize the Artic explorers’ obsession with the icy region and the raging, American Civil War battles taking place. Dreamy, radiant colors and a nature theme suggest the boundless grandeur of the American wilderness. Church’s belief in life everlasting is influenced by the essayists Emerson and Thoreau. They are the central figures, in the idealistic, social and philosophical, Transcendental movement emerging, in the Eastern United States, early to around mid - 19th century.

Conclude:

Church thrills viewers with his breathtaking ability to sculpt the coastal landscape of Newfoundland. What precedes The Icebergs are eight full-color images of the entire painting, six stunning detailed images of portions of the canvas, and original studies from his voyage. All together they illustrate the evolution of Church’s masterwork and why The Icebergs, painted by one of the most famous American artists, reaches the apex of American Romanticism.

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SOURCES:

"History of Art Timeline" "Dates of Movements, Styles, Schools, Artists. Visual Arts Encyclopedia." Web.

ARTIST, PAINTING, HISTORY & CULTURE Frederick Edwin Church

Avery, Kevin. J. “Frederic Edwin Church. In Heilbrunn. Timeline of Art History. New York. The Metropolitan Museum of Art, 2000. Web.

The Icebergs

Dallas Museum of Art, Dallas, anonymous gift. Avery, Kevin J. See previous citation for the Metropolitan Museum of Art. Web. Matilsky, Barbara, “In Search of Icebergs Tracing the,1859, expedition of the painter Frederick Edwin Church”. Copyright. Web. The Voyage of the Icebergs: Frederic Edwin Church's Arctic Masterpiece. By Eleanor Jones Harvey. New Haven & London: Yale University Press. Reviewed by Russell A. Potter. Web. Brittanica.com/art/luminism. John Baur, Director of the Whitney Museum of American Art, coined the word Luminism. Web.

Romantic movement, American

Havet, Isabelle, et al. Th Hudson River School. “Influences and Historical Factors”. “The American Civil War.” Web. Transcendentalism, An American Philosophy, US history.org 26f.asp. Web. Transcendentalism, Definitions, Origins, & Influence. Britannica.com, Transcendentalism-American-movement. Web

ESSENTIAL TOPIC Subject Matter: History. Portrait. Genre. Landscape. Still Life.

“Hierarchy of the Genres” Visual Arts Encyclopedia 2015. Web.

Guidance to Describe:

1. Become familiar with the Topic.     2. Look closely. Go back & forth.     3. You may see things differently.

Color:

Luminous colors glow with unexpected warmth in the frigid, artic climate. Sea and sky complement each other. The touch of green in nature’s archway and the highlights skimming over ripples in the water accent and contrast with the towering, pale-white icebergs.

Shape:

Church outlines, shades, and highlights shapes with utmost delicacy to create the illusion of 3-dimensionality on this grand 2-dimensional Picture Plane (flat surface).

Texture:

There is no need to touch texture. The wood fragments, the shimmering sea and the frozen icebergs are sensed by your brain.

Guidance to Analyze:

1. Become familiar with the Topic.      2. Look closely. Go back & forth.     3. You may see things differently.

Focal Point:

The Icebergs.

Contrast:

Direct and reflective light creates lightness and darkness. Sky and sea in juxtaposition with pale icebergs produce heightened drama.

Direction/ Movement:

Church directs you to objects in this spectacular painting. Ripples suggest natural movement. Beautiful and different pathways are here to explore.

Guidance to Analyze:

1. Become familiar with the Topic.     2. Look closely. Go back & forth.     3. Perspective is an artful illusion.

Yes:

Combination.

Perspective (Basic):

Foreground represents the horizontal section containing the mast. Details are clearest and colors are saturated here. Middle ground becomes pale and less distinct. It recedes into a blurry Background containing the smallest, least clear glacier. Each ground contributes to the illusion of depth/ distance.

Atmospheric Perspective:

Church heightens the visual experience, where water and sky meet at Horizon Line. It is here that he lights the painting from above with a bluish/ grey sky and casts highlights and delicate shadows over the sea.

Guidance to Analyze:

1. Become familiar with the Topic.     2. Look closely. Go back & forth.     3. Consider the mood.

Seascape:

Nostalgic feelings surface. The painting is serene and reverential. Surrounding cold waters of the Artic ocean overwhelm the objects.

A Seascape is in the same category as a Landscape painting. Both are of the out-of-doors. Sea life, figures, and all sorts of objects and things may be visible.

Guidance to Analyze:

1. Become familiar with the Topic.     2. Look closely. Go back & forth.     3. Consider Characteristics.

Era:

Renaissance (15th – Mid – 19th Century)

Movement:

Romantic, American (1825 – 1875)

Characteristics of Style:

Idealization of the lasting qualities in nature vs. the fragility of man and objects. Transcendentalism: an American literary and philosophical movement occurs during the same time frame.

Guidance to Analyze:

1. Become familiar with the Topic     2. Look closely. Go back & forth.     3. Consider Symbolism

Christian Symbols:

Indirectly represented.

Secular Symbols:

Travelers aboard the vessel believe their souls go on to a heavenly place, if they do not return home from their Artic expedition. Remnants of the ship represent the people who lost their lives. The expedition is symbolic of the historical period during the American Civil War.