{"id":361,"date":"2020-05-06T14:40:09","date_gmt":"2020-05-06T18:40:09","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/courses.bowdoin.edu\/art-history-3570-spring-2020\/?page_id=361"},"modified":"2020-05-09T19:46:49","modified_gmt":"2020-05-09T23:46:49","slug":"the-search-for-patrons-an-overview-of-american-artistic-institutions-critical-discourse-in-nineteenth-century-new-york-city","status":"publish","type":"page","link":"https:\/\/courses.bowdoin.edu\/art-history-3570-spring-2020\/thematic-essays\/the-search-for-patrons-an-overview-of-american-artistic-institutions-critical-discourse-in-nineteenth-century-new-york-city\/","title":{"rendered":"The Search for Patrons: An Overview of American Artistic Institutions &amp; Critical Discourse in Nineteenth-Century New York City"},"content":{"rendered":"<p><strong>The Search for Patrons: An Overview of American Artistic Institutions &amp; Critical Discourse in Nineteenth-Century New York City<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>Nineteenth-century New York was a rapidly growing port-city that connected the rest of America to the transatlantic continents of Europe and Asia.\u00a0 As the city underwent vast economic expansion, the burgeoning middle class wanted to learn about arts and culture, and moreover, the high-class American, was striving to achieve taste.\u00a0 Whether this \u2018taste\u2019 was interpreted to diminish in value with its democratization differed based on the various ideologies surrounding art, its worth and purpose in nineteenth-century America.\u00a0 In many ways, these ideologies were manifested in the variety of cultural institutions, unions, associations, and clubs that sprung up alongside the commercial galleries, which combined to create the thriving art scene characteristic of twentieth-century Manhattan.\u00a0 In the 1840s and 50s, emigrants brought with them artistic technical knowledge and heritage, while the emergence of the American department store marked a turning point in the climb of consumer experience and the sale of luxury.\u00a0 The subsequent rise in print media played an important role in educating the American public\u2014including cities like Philadelphia, Chicago, and Boston\u2014on the artistic discourse surrounding foreign art, and introduced them to new perspectives. \u00a0It is in this context that American artists attempted to gain a foothold to contend with European art and its rich lineage which stretched back centuries before the foundation of the United States itself.\u00a0 This thematic essay will investigate the role of institutions and periodicals which promoted and reviewed artistic events, to understand their relationship to the development of a nationalistic art movement in nineteenth-century America.<\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p><strong>Establishing The National Academy of Design<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>The National Academy of Design was founded in 1826 by artists like the American landscape painter Thomas Cole, as a concrete way to legitimize the profession and identity of the American artist in particular.\u00a0\u00a0Organized and directed by artists for artists, the Academy was interested in training and promoting younger generations while generating market value for contemporary American art.<sup class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote \" data-mfn=\"1\" data-mfn-post-scope=\"00000000000004170000000000000000_361\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-1\">1<\/a><\/sup><span id=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-1\" role=\"tooltip\" class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote__note\" tabindex=\"0\" data-mfn=\"1\">Kenneth J. Meyers, \u201cThe Public Display of Art in New York City, 1664-1914,\u201d in Rave Reviews ed. David B. Dearinger (New York: National Academy of Design, 2000), 37.<\/span>\u00a0 However, the formation of the National Academy was especially significant because it allowed artists to claim professional authority in matters of artistic taste.\u00a0 Its president from 1826 to 1845, Samuel F. B. Morse, structured the organization by selecting thirty full-time artist-academicians that served to elect associate members, admit students, and screen the submissions for each annual exhibition.<sup class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote \" data-mfn=\"2\" data-mfn-post-scope=\"00000000000004170000000000000000_361\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-2\">2<\/a><\/sup><span id=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-2\" role=\"tooltip\" class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote__note\" tabindex=\"0\" data-mfn=\"2\">Rachel N. Klein, \u201cArt and Authority in Antebellum New York City: The Rise and Fall of the American Art-Union,\u201d The Journal of American History, 81, no. 4 (March 1995): 1536.<\/span>\u00a0 This was reflective of Morse\u2019s own belief that national art\u2019s only way forward was if artists maintained aesthetic authority alongside the support of the educated elite.<sup class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote \" data-mfn=\"3\" data-mfn-post-scope=\"00000000000004170000000000000000_361\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-3\">3<\/a><\/sup><span id=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-3\" role=\"tooltip\" class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote__note\" tabindex=\"0\" data-mfn=\"3\">Klein, \u201cArt and Authority in Antebellum New York City,\u201d 1536.<\/span>\u00a0 Beginning with their annual exhibitions in May 1826, the Academy displayed works not previously shown to the public and provided an alternative market for those concerned with the authenticity of old master works imported from Europe.<sup class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote \" data-mfn=\"4\" data-mfn-post-scope=\"00000000000004170000000000000000_361\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-4\">4<\/a><\/sup><span id=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-4\" role=\"tooltip\" class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote__note\" tabindex=\"0\" data-mfn=\"4\">Kenneth J. Meyers, \u201cThe Public Display of Art in New York City, 1664-1914,\u201d in Rave Reviews ed. David B. Dearinger (New York: National Academy of Design, 2000), 37.<\/span>\u00a0 The Academy indirectly fostered patronage, establishing a social network between academicians and wealthy patrons by offering an honorary membership to aristocratic art viewers.<sup class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote \" data-mfn=\"5\" data-mfn-post-scope=\"00000000000004170000000000000000_361\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-5\">5<\/a><\/sup><span id=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-5\" role=\"tooltip\" class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote__note\" tabindex=\"0\" data-mfn=\"5\">Klein, \u201cArt and Authority in Antebellum New York City,\u201d 1536.<\/span>\u00a0 This institutional structure did little to generate sales, as the majority of works exhibited were borrowed from private collections and most others failed to find purchasers.<sup class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote \" data-mfn=\"6\" data-mfn-post-scope=\"00000000000004170000000000000000_361\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-6\">6<\/a><\/sup><span id=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-6\" role=\"tooltip\" class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote__note\" tabindex=\"0\" data-mfn=\"6\">Klein, \u201cArt and Authority in Antebellum New York City,\u201d 1536.<\/span> \u00a0However, the Academy\u2019s nineteenth-century annual exhibitions served as an important platform for American artists to display their work, the content of which were usually landscapes or portraits of the patrons frequenting them.<\/p>\n<p>The Academy not only exhibited American art in the nineteenth-century\u2014at the outset of which, dealers could not make enough money running a business that specialized in its sale\u2014but it as an institution also took on the broader task of educating the American public on art\u2019s significance and value, especially in its preliminary years.\u00a0 Given the lack of discourse on American art at the beginning of the century and even later on, American artists had to take on the task of defining their art and its importance.\u00a0 Although the economy was prosperous at its founding, the late 1830s were a time of economic hardship, and it would not be until the mid-1840s that the economy would recover, marking the increase in young men who aspired to be painters.<sup class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote \" data-mfn=\"7\" data-mfn-post-scope=\"00000000000004170000000000000000_361\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-7\">7<\/a><\/sup><span id=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-7\" role=\"tooltip\" class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote__note\" tabindex=\"0\" data-mfn=\"7\">Kenneth J. Meyers, \u201cThe Public Display of Art in New York City, 1664-1914,\u201d in Rave Reviews ed. David B. Dearinger (New York: National Academy of Design, 2000), 39.<\/span>\u00a0 At this time, there was also a shift in the focus of New York art collectors from old masters to contemporary European and American art.<sup class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote \" data-mfn=\"8\" data-mfn-post-scope=\"00000000000004170000000000000000_361\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-8\">8<\/a><\/sup><span id=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-8\" role=\"tooltip\" class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote__note\" tabindex=\"0\" data-mfn=\"8\">Kenneth J. Meyers, \u201cThe Public Display of Art in New York City, 1664-1914,\u201d in Rave Reviews ed. David B. Dearinger (New York: National Academy of Design, 2000), 40.<\/span>\u00a0 A branch of the French firm Goupil, Vibert and Co. set up shop at 289 Broadway alongside other commercial art galleries, and was involved in the manufacture and sale of European prints as well as contemporary French paintings.<sup class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote \" data-mfn=\"9\" data-mfn-post-scope=\"00000000000004170000000000000000_361\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-9\">9<\/a><\/sup><span id=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-9\" role=\"tooltip\" class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote__note\" tabindex=\"0\" data-mfn=\"9\">Kenneth J. Meyers, \u201cThe Public Display of Art in New York City, 1664-1914,\u201d in Rave Reviews ed. David B. Dearinger (New York: National Academy of Design, 2000), 40.<\/span>\u00a0 Goupil\u2019s earliest New York employees\u2014Michel Knoedler and William Schaus\u2014would go onto open their own shops and become some of the most influential dealers in the nineteenth-century American art market.\u00a0 Emigrants from Europe throughout the 1840s and 1850s played a huge role in shaping the city, as they brought with them both technical artistic knowledge and a rich cultural heritage that emphasized the importance of art in society.\u00a0 However, while European art served as an important influence in the development of an American lineage, it also undermined its demand.\u00a0 The Academy had a particularly difficult position to reconcile, as it attempted to craft and elevate a distinctly American art, at a time when America was learning from Europe and its rich cultural and artistic legacy.<\/p>\n<p><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"wp-image-404 alignnone\" src=\"https:\/\/courses.bowdoin.edu\/art-history-3570-spring-2020\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/368\/2020\/05\/Screen-Shot-2020-05-03-at-6.11.25-PM-300x191.png\" alt=\"\" width=\"432\" height=\"275\" srcset=\"https:\/\/courses.bowdoin.edu\/art-history-3570-spring-2020\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/368\/2020\/05\/Screen-Shot-2020-05-03-at-6.11.25-PM-300x191.png 300w, https:\/\/courses.bowdoin.edu\/art-history-3570-spring-2020\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/368\/2020\/05\/Screen-Shot-2020-05-03-at-6.11.25-PM-768x488.png 768w, https:\/\/courses.bowdoin.edu\/art-history-3570-spring-2020\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/368\/2020\/05\/Screen-Shot-2020-05-03-at-6.11.25-PM.png 878w\" sizes=\"auto, (max-width: 432px) 100vw, 432px\" \/><\/p>\n<p>Figure 1.\u00a0Peter B. Wright,\u00a0<em>The National Academy of Design, Twenty-third Street and Fourth Avenue<\/em>, 1863-1865.<sup class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote \" data-mfn=\"10\" data-mfn-post-scope=\"00000000000004170000000000000000_361\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-10\">10<\/a><\/sup><span id=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-10\" role=\"tooltip\" class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote__note\" tabindex=\"0\" data-mfn=\"10\">Kenneth J. Meyers, \u201cThe Public Display of Art in New York City, 1664-1914,\u201d in Rave Reviews ed. David B. Dearinger (New York: National Academy of Design, 2000), 43.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><strong>The American Art-Union (1839-1852)<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>Founded in 1839 by American merchants and professionals committed to promoting art to moralize the public, the American Art-Union was an important art organization that eventually boomed alongside the economy in the late 1840s.\u00a0 The Union grew out of James Herring\u2019s Apollo Gallery when he failed to meet his expenses.\u00a0 He called a meeting of gentlemanly art enthusiasts, whom ultimately joined Herring as managers in raising capital by selling five dollar annual subscriptions.<sup class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote \" data-mfn=\"11\" data-mfn-post-scope=\"00000000000004170000000000000000_361\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-11\">11<\/a><\/sup><span id=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-11\" role=\"tooltip\" class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote__note\" tabindex=\"0\" data-mfn=\"11\">Kenneth J. Meyers, \u201cThe Public Display of Art in New York City, 1664-1914,\u201d in Rave Reviews ed. David B. Dearinger (New York: National Academy of Design, 2000), 41.<\/span>\u00a0 In exchange for their fee, they \u201cpublished a magazine, commissioned engravings, and purchased recent American paintings and sculptures that were put on display in the organization\u2019s exhibition room.\u201d<sup class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote \" data-mfn=\"12\" data-mfn-post-scope=\"00000000000004170000000000000000_361\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-12\">12<\/a><\/sup><span id=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-12\" role=\"tooltip\" class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote__note\" tabindex=\"0\" data-mfn=\"12\">Kenneth J. Meyers, \u201cThe Public Display of Art in New York City, 1664-1914,\u201d in Rave Reviews ed. David B. Dearinger (New York: National Academy of Design, 2000), 41.<\/span>\u00a0 The managers of the Art-Union refuted the Academy\u2019s\u00a0 claim to artistic professionalism and authority, excluding them from the manager position in fear that they would politicize art\u2019s purchase.<sup class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote \" data-mfn=\"13\" data-mfn-post-scope=\"00000000000004170000000000000000_361\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-13\">13<\/a><\/sup><span id=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-13\" role=\"tooltip\" class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote__note\" tabindex=\"0\" data-mfn=\"13\">Kenneth J. Meyers, \u201cThe Public Display of Art in New York City, 1664-1914,\u201d in Rave Reviews ed. David B. Dearinger (New York: National Academy of Design, 2000), 41.<\/span> \u00a0Members of the Art-Union were not charged for entry into the exhibition\u2014while a one-time ticket for a non-member was 25 cents\u2014and they received a magazine subscription, as well as a copy of the year\u2019s engraving and a chance in the lottery to win one of the artworks.<sup class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote \" data-mfn=\"14\" data-mfn-post-scope=\"00000000000004170000000000000000_361\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-14\">14<\/a><\/sup><span id=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-14\" role=\"tooltip\" class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote__note\" tabindex=\"0\" data-mfn=\"14\">Kenneth J. Meyers, \u201cThe Public Display of Art in New York City, 1664-1914,\u201d in Rave Reviews ed. David B. Dearinger (New York: National Academy of Design, 2000), 41.<\/span>\u00a0 As the value of American paintings increased in the late 1840s, alongside a prosperous market, subscriptions followed.\u00a0 In 1848, the <em>Bulletin of the American Art-Union <\/em>featured an article about Thomas Cole\u2019s series \u201cThe Voyage of Life,\u201d declaring that its initial purchaser had paid six thousand dollars for the paintings.<sup class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote \" data-mfn=\"15\" data-mfn-post-scope=\"00000000000004170000000000000000_361\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-15\">15<\/a><\/sup><span id=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-15\" role=\"tooltip\" class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote__note\" tabindex=\"0\" data-mfn=\"15\">Klein, \u201cArt and Authority in Antebellum New York City,\u201d 1547.<\/span>\u00a0\u00a0 The <em>Bulletin<\/em>went on to suggest that no other institution had offered Americans the chance to win such a valuable prize, and the public\u2019s knowledge of this should result in a massive increase in subscriptions.<sup class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote \" data-mfn=\"16\" data-mfn-post-scope=\"00000000000004170000000000000000_361\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-16\">16<\/a><\/sup><span id=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-16\" role=\"tooltip\" class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote__note\" tabindex=\"0\" data-mfn=\"16\">Klein, \u201cArt and Authority in Antebellum New York City,\u201d 1547.<\/span>\u00a0 In somewhat of a self-fulfilling prophecy, subscriptions rose from 9,666 in 1847 to 16,475 the following year, as the Art-Union offered hundreds of prizes from its extensive collection of artworks.<sup class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote \" data-mfn=\"17\" data-mfn-post-scope=\"00000000000004170000000000000000_361\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-17\">17<\/a><\/sup><span id=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-17\" role=\"tooltip\" class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote__note\" tabindex=\"0\" data-mfn=\"17\">Klein, \u201cArt and Authority in Antebellum New York City,\u201d 1547.<\/span>\u00a0 Despite its commercial affiliation and nature, the Union was not profit-seeking, with all of the organization\u2019s profits channeled directly to supporting American artists.<sup class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote \" data-mfn=\"18\" data-mfn-post-scope=\"00000000000004170000000000000000_361\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-18\">18<\/a><\/sup><span id=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-18\" role=\"tooltip\" class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote__note\" tabindex=\"0\" data-mfn=\"18\">Klein, \u201cArt and Authority in Antebellum New York City,\u201d 1549.<\/span><\/p>\n<p>The Art-Union\u2019s emergence signalled the arrival of a European model of artistic patronage, one that participated in the production of artistic discourse through publications and subscriptions in attempts \u201cto liberate artists from dependence on private patrons while enlisting art in the reformation of public life.\u201d<sup class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote \" data-mfn=\"19\" data-mfn-post-scope=\"00000000000004170000000000000000_361\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-19\">19<\/a><\/sup><span id=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-19\" role=\"tooltip\" class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote__note\" tabindex=\"0\" data-mfn=\"19\">Klein, \u201cArt and Authority in Antebellum New York City,\u201d 1537.<\/span>\u00a0 Modelling themselves off of Edinburgh Art-Union, which in-turn was influenced by those in Germany and Switzerland, the American Art-Union participated in the European tradition by creating an organization that promoted state sponsorship for the arts at a moment when there was none.<sup class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote \" data-mfn=\"20\" data-mfn-post-scope=\"00000000000004170000000000000000_361\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-20\">20<\/a><\/sup><span id=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-20\" role=\"tooltip\" class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote__note\" tabindex=\"0\" data-mfn=\"20\">Klein, \u201cArt and Authority in Antebellum New York City,\u201d 1537.<\/span> \u00a0 This model championed art\u2019s democratization, joining democrats and conservative Whigs in a mission to diffuse a cultural taste, which would help develop morality within American public life.<sup class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote \" data-mfn=\"21\" data-mfn-post-scope=\"00000000000004170000000000000000_361\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-21\">21<\/a><\/sup><span id=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-21\" role=\"tooltip\" class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote__note\" tabindex=\"0\" data-mfn=\"21\">Klein, \u201cArt and Authority in Antebellum New York City,\u201d 1537.<\/span>\u00a0 The organization illuminates the cultural politics and debate surrounding American art\u2019s place in the antebellum North, as supporters of the Union cited private enterprise\u2019s inability to foster a nationalistic art movement with the inherent spiritual value necessary to convey public virtue.<sup class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote \" data-mfn=\"22\" data-mfn-post-scope=\"00000000000004170000000000000000_361\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-22\">22<\/a><\/sup><span id=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-22\" role=\"tooltip\" class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote__note\" tabindex=\"0\" data-mfn=\"22\">Klein, \u201cArt and Authority in Antebellum New York City,\u201d 1540.<\/span> With their goal to produce a nationalistic art, managers were skeptical of the emigrants that infiltrated the market with contemporary European works, thus presenting American art with competition that it could not withstand on its own.<\/p>\n<p>As Goupil, Vibert &amp; Co. witnessed the success of the American Art-Union, they attempted to reproduce a similar service that included European works with the creation of the International Art-Union in 1848.<sup class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote \" data-mfn=\"23\" data-mfn-post-scope=\"00000000000004170000000000000000_361\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-23\">23<\/a><\/sup><span id=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-23\" role=\"tooltip\" class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote__note\" tabindex=\"0\" data-mfn=\"23\">Klein, \u201cArt and Authority in Antebellum New York City,\u201d 1549.<\/span>\u00a0 Emulating the American Art-Union, they established a gallery with subscriptions that provided customers with engravings and guaranteed entry into a lottery that gave them a chance to win European and American art works.<sup class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote \" data-mfn=\"24\" data-mfn-post-scope=\"00000000000004170000000000000000_361\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-24\">24<\/a><\/sup><span id=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-24\" role=\"tooltip\" class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote__note\" tabindex=\"0\" data-mfn=\"24\">Klein, \u201cArt and Authority in Antebellum New York City,\u201d 1549.<\/span>\u00a0 However, instead of using their profits to support American artists, the company promised to sponsor one American artist to study abroad in Europe for a year, and kept the rest for themselves.<sup class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote \" data-mfn=\"25\" data-mfn-post-scope=\"00000000000004170000000000000000_361\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-25\">25<\/a><\/sup><span id=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-25\" role=\"tooltip\" class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote__note\" tabindex=\"0\" data-mfn=\"25\">Klein, \u201cArt and Authority in Antebellum New York City,\u201d 1549.<\/span>\u00a0 As an established commercial gallery, Goupil, Vibert &amp; Co. not only presented a threat to the American Art-Union\u2019s customer base, but also embodied the exact profit-seeking corporation within the art market that did not have American artists in mind.\u00a0 In the <em>Bulletin,\u00a0<\/em>a writer suggests that the artists of most French paintings and statues openly engage the viewer with the lewd and salacious, going onto accuse the emigrants of demoralizing America to fulfill the audience\u2019s sensual appetites for profit.<sup class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote \" data-mfn=\"26\" data-mfn-post-scope=\"00000000000004170000000000000000_361\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-26\">26<\/a><\/sup><span id=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-26\" role=\"tooltip\" class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote__note\" tabindex=\"0\" data-mfn=\"26\">\u201cThe International Art-Union,\u201d Bulletin of the American Art-Union, November 1849, p. 12-13.<\/span> Although the organization held a prominent position by the late 1840s, opposition from the press and artists ultimately resulted in its demise a few years later.<\/p>\n<p><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"alignnone wp-image-408\" src=\"https:\/\/courses.bowdoin.edu\/art-history-3570-spring-2020\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/368\/2020\/05\/peno02a-220x300.jpg\" alt=\"\" width=\"251\" height=\"342\" srcset=\"https:\/\/courses.bowdoin.edu\/art-history-3570-spring-2020\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/368\/2020\/05\/peno02a-220x300.jpg 220w, https:\/\/courses.bowdoin.edu\/art-history-3570-spring-2020\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/368\/2020\/05\/peno02a.jpg 476w\" sizes=\"auto, (max-width: 251px) 100vw, 251px\" \/><\/p>\n<p>Figure 2. \u00a0<em>The International Art-Union<\/em>, exhibition catalogue (New York: Oliver &amp; Brother, 1849), frontispiece.<sup class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote \" data-mfn=\"27\" data-mfn-post-scope=\"00000000000004170000000000000000_361\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-27\">27<\/a><\/sup><span id=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-27\" role=\"tooltip\" class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote__note\" tabindex=\"0\" data-mfn=\"27\">Nineteenth-century art worldwide. &#8220;The Perils and Perks of Trading Art Overseas&#8221; (web page), Nineteenth Century Art Worldwide (website), accessed May 6, 2020, https:\/\/www.19thc-artworldwide.org\/spring17\/penot-on-the-perils-and-perks-of-trading-art-overseas-goupils-new-york-branch.<\/span><\/p>\n<p>In 1848, owner and editor of <em>The Home Journal<\/em>\u2014a publication targeted toward middle-class women\u2014Nathaniel Parker Willis engaged in the public debate, defending the French pair as legitimate arbiters of taste in contrast to the \u2018merchant amateurs\u2019 that managed the Art-Union.<sup class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote \" data-mfn=\"28\" data-mfn-post-scope=\"00000000000004170000000000000000_361\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-28\">28<\/a><\/sup><span id=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-28\" role=\"tooltip\" class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote__note\" tabindex=\"0\" data-mfn=\"28\">Klein, \u201cArt and Authority in Antebellum New York City,\u201d 1550.<\/span>\u00a0 Willis went on to suggest that the Art-Union\u2019s system was inherently flawed, because of its emphasis on inclusivity and inadequate appreciation and compensation for artists.<sup class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote \" data-mfn=\"29\" data-mfn-post-scope=\"00000000000004170000000000000000_361\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-29\">29<\/a><\/sup><span id=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-29\" role=\"tooltip\" class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote__note\" tabindex=\"0\" data-mfn=\"29\">Klein, \u201cArt and Authority in Antebellum New York City,\u201d 1551.<\/span>\u00a0 He criticized the organization\u2019s reliance on prizes to increase its distribution, a structural dynamic that he argued compelled the purchasing committee to obtain a large quantity of paintings at a low cost.<sup class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote \" data-mfn=\"30\" data-mfn-post-scope=\"00000000000004170000000000000000_361\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-30\">30<\/a><\/sup><span id=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-30\" role=\"tooltip\" class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote__note\" tabindex=\"0\" data-mfn=\"30\">Klein, \u201cArt and Authority in Antebellum New York City,\u201d 1551.<\/span>\u00a0 Due to the Art-Union\u2019s lack of competition and discrimination, Willis accused it of becoming a \u201cguano to mediocrity,\u201d which failed to encourage artists to improve because it championed pictures that would have otherwise gone unsold, as prizes.<sup class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote \" data-mfn=\"31\" data-mfn-post-scope=\"00000000000004170000000000000000_361\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-31\">31<\/a><\/sup><span id=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-31\" role=\"tooltip\" class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote__note\" tabindex=\"0\" data-mfn=\"31\">Klein, \u201cArt and Authority in Antebellum New York City,\u201d 1551.<\/span>\u00a0 Klein states that \u201cunlike members of the Art-Union set, who believed that taste could become universal, Willis constructed taste as a form of capital\u2014superior to wealth, limited in supply, and accessible only to the enlightened few.\u201d<sup class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote \" data-mfn=\"32\" data-mfn-post-scope=\"00000000000004170000000000000000_361\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-32\">32<\/a><\/sup><span id=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-32\" role=\"tooltip\" class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote__note\" tabindex=\"0\" data-mfn=\"32\">Klein, \u201cArt and Authority in Antebellum New York City,\u201d 1550.<\/span>\u00a0 His opinion was echoed in the <em>International Magazine of Science and Art, <\/em>in the 1850 article \u201cArt-Unions Considered.\u201d<sup class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote \" data-mfn=\"33\" data-mfn-post-scope=\"00000000000004170000000000000000_361\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-33\">33<\/a><\/sup><span id=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-33\" role=\"tooltip\" class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote__note\" tabindex=\"0\" data-mfn=\"33\">Klein, \u201cArt and Authority in Antebellum New York City,\u201d 1551.<\/span>\u00a0 Willis ultimately advocated for the adoption of the European model, which would entail the establishment of public galleries with periodic viewings of private collections made available to the public.<sup class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote \" data-mfn=\"34\" data-mfn-post-scope=\"00000000000004170000000000000000_361\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-34\">34<\/a><\/sup><span id=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-34\" role=\"tooltip\" class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote__note\" tabindex=\"0\" data-mfn=\"34\">Klein, \u201cArt and Authority in Antebellum New York City,\u201d 1554.<\/span><\/p>\n<p>While the Art-Union saw the democratization of taste as crucial to the establishment of a distinctly American art, the <em>Home Journal<\/em>sided with the National Academy of Design, echoing artists concerns over the Art-Union\u2019s competing model of aesthetic authority.<sup class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote \" data-mfn=\"35\" data-mfn-post-scope=\"00000000000004170000000000000000_361\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-35\">35<\/a><\/sup><span id=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-35\" role=\"tooltip\" class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote__note\" tabindex=\"0\" data-mfn=\"35\">Klein, \u201cArt and Authority in Antebellum New York City,\u201d 1554.<\/span> Fearing that artists would opt to sell their work to the Art-Union instead of exhibit it with the National Academy, Academicians blamed the Art-Union\u2019s gallery for their dwindling admissions.<sup class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote \" data-mfn=\"36\" data-mfn-post-scope=\"00000000000004170000000000000000_361\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-36\">36<\/a><\/sup><span id=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-36\" role=\"tooltip\" class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote__note\" tabindex=\"0\" data-mfn=\"36\">Klein, \u201cArt and Authority in Antebellum New York City,\u201d 1554.<\/span>\u00a0 However, the most vehement opposition the Art-Union faced was not from the Academicians, but originated in the second and third tiers of artists below them, who relied on the Art-Union to provide a market for their paintings.<sup class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote \" data-mfn=\"37\" data-mfn-post-scope=\"00000000000004170000000000000000_361\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-37\">37<\/a><\/sup><span id=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-37\" role=\"tooltip\" class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote__note\" tabindex=\"0\" data-mfn=\"37\">Klein, \u201cArt and Authority in Antebellum New York City,\u201d 1554.<\/span> \u00a0Landscape artist Thomas Doughty, once a notable artist but later forgotten, published a letter accusing the Art-Union for suddenly discontinuing his patronage after purchasing about fifty of his works from 1839 to 1850.<sup class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote \" data-mfn=\"38\" data-mfn-post-scope=\"00000000000004170000000000000000_361\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-38\">38<\/a><\/sup><span id=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-38\" role=\"tooltip\" class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote__note\" tabindex=\"0\" data-mfn=\"38\">Klein, \u201cArt and Authority in Antebellum New York City,\u201d 1555.<\/span>\u00a0 Doughty\u2019s concerns illuminated the organization\u2019s problematic position as a taste maker that had too much control over the American art market, as he argued that the men of the Art-Union were attempting to engage in matters beyond their professional expertise.<sup class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote \" data-mfn=\"39\" data-mfn-post-scope=\"00000000000004170000000000000000_361\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-39\">39<\/a><\/sup><span id=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-39\" role=\"tooltip\" class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote__note\" tabindex=\"0\" data-mfn=\"39\">Klein, \u201cArt and Authority in Antebellum New York City,\u201d 1555.<\/span>\u00a0 In response to these issues, by the late 1840s, a group of New York artists joined Willis in constructing alternatives to the current system of American patronage.<sup class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote \" data-mfn=\"40\" data-mfn-post-scope=\"00000000000004170000000000000000_361\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-40\">40<\/a><\/sup><span id=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-40\" role=\"tooltip\" class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote__note\" tabindex=\"0\" data-mfn=\"40\">Klein, \u201cArt and Authority in Antebellum New York City,\u201d 1555.<\/span> \u00a0John Kendrick Fisher, another artist that failed to rise through the ranks of the National Academy, exhibited several paintings with the American Art-Union and sold only one to the organization in 1849.\u00a0 Fisher joined Willis in arguing for the foundation of public galleries in urban cities to house collections and protect artists that lacked sufficient patronage.<sup class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote \" data-mfn=\"41\" data-mfn-post-scope=\"00000000000004170000000000000000_361\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-41\">41<\/a><\/sup><span id=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-41\" role=\"tooltip\" class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote__note\" tabindex=\"0\" data-mfn=\"41\">Klein, \u201cArt and Authority in Antebellum New York City,\u201d 1556.<\/span><\/p>\n<p>Eventually, both Fisher and Doughty published their critiques in The<em>New York Herald, <\/em>a penny-press which emerged as the American Art-Union\u2019s dominant antagonist.\u00a0 By their very nature, penny papers were engaged in an aggressive campaign to expand circulation, constructing themselves as the unbiased critic and voice of the public.\u00a0 In doing so, they avoided explicitly addressing class politics, and instead, represented the public struggle against the privileged Art-Union and the cultural privilege it represented.\u00a0 The <em>Herald\u00a0<\/em>praised Goupil and Vibert as it criticized the wealthy Art-Union managers who believed that they could create an institution to imbue the public with a national taste, contending that instead, the organization functioned to promote the private interests of its managers.\u00a0 Despite their common hostility towards the Art-Union, <em>The Home Journal\u00a0<\/em>sided with academicians while the penny press gave voice to the American artists that were lacking in institutional privilege.\u00a0 Eventually, the <em>Herald <\/em>focused in on the Art-Union\u2019s lottery system, suggesting that it allowed the managers\u2014who never provided the prices they paid for paintings\u2014to deceive lottery winners and undercut artists by paying low prices.\u00a0 Although the Art-Union lottery was modelled after licensed lotteries of the eighteenth-century which served to raise money for community projects, Klein suggests that during the antebellum decades \u201clotteries acquired a new meaning.\u00a0 They evoked concern among reformers who associated recreational gambling with supposed urban sins from laziness to poverty, financial profligacy, and thievery.\u201d\u00a0 The <em>Herald\u2019s\u00a0<\/em>ingenious strategy to target the lottery as fundamentally problematic was successful, because it put Art-Union managers in positions of cultural authority where they did not belong.\u00a0When subscriptions dropped dramatically in autumn of 1851, officials were forced to delay their payment to artists, which fuelled assaults of the organization in local newspapers, as they charged the Art-Union with consistently undervaluing American artists\u2019 work.<sup class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote \" data-mfn=\"42\" data-mfn-post-scope=\"00000000000004170000000000000000_361\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-42\">42<\/a><\/sup><span id=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-42\" role=\"tooltip\" class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote__note\" tabindex=\"0\" data-mfn=\"42\">Klein, \u201cArt and Authority in Antebellum New York City,\u201d 1556-1559.<\/span><\/p>\n<p>Its downfall began in January 1852, when the Art-Union managers sued the <em>Herald\u2019s <\/em>paper editor James Gordon Bennett for slander.\u00a0Throughout the case, the penny press portrayed itself as the heroic voice of the public brave enough to challenge those in power.\u00a0 When the court closed the case, Bennett sought revenge by asking the judge to issue an injunction against the Art-Union.\u00a0 Although his proposition was initially declined, with the pressure of the press, Bennett ultimately forced the district attorney to bring two actions against the organization in the Supreme Court.\u00a0 In June of 1852, the court ruled the Art-Union an illegal lottery and, by extension, a violation of the state constitution, bringing an end to the organization after thirteen years.\u00a0 The emergence of the Art-Union, marked a moment when wealthy leaders believed it possible to create and regulate a shared culture.\u00a0 However, its turbulent life was indicative of a public skepticism around the idea that the few could craft a culture for the many.\u00a0 Therefore, instead of providing a foundation for social and national unity, the Art-Union illuminated the class divisions that lay just beneath the surface.<sup class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote \" data-mfn=\"43\" data-mfn-post-scope=\"00000000000004170000000000000000_361\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-43\">43<\/a><\/sup><span id=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-43\" role=\"tooltip\" class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote__note\" tabindex=\"0\" data-mfn=\"43\">Klein, \u201cArt and Authority in Antebellum New York City,\u201d 1559-1560.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"alignnone wp-image-406\" src=\"https:\/\/courses.bowdoin.edu\/art-history-3570-spring-2020\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/368\/2020\/05\/Screen-Shot-2020-05-03-at-4.50.17-PM-300x187.png\" alt=\"\" width=\"413\" height=\"257\" srcset=\"https:\/\/courses.bowdoin.edu\/art-history-3570-spring-2020\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/368\/2020\/05\/Screen-Shot-2020-05-03-at-4.50.17-PM-300x187.png 300w, https:\/\/courses.bowdoin.edu\/art-history-3570-spring-2020\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/368\/2020\/05\/Screen-Shot-2020-05-03-at-4.50.17-PM-1024x639.png 1024w, https:\/\/courses.bowdoin.edu\/art-history-3570-spring-2020\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/368\/2020\/05\/Screen-Shot-2020-05-03-at-4.50.17-PM-768x479.png 768w, https:\/\/courses.bowdoin.edu\/art-history-3570-spring-2020\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/368\/2020\/05\/Screen-Shot-2020-05-03-at-4.50.17-PM-1200x749.png 1200w, https:\/\/courses.bowdoin.edu\/art-history-3570-spring-2020\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/368\/2020\/05\/Screen-Shot-2020-05-03-at-4.50.17-PM.png 1400w\" sizes=\"auto, (max-width: 413px) 100vw, 413px\" \/><\/p>\n<p>Figure 3. Samuel Wallin, <em>Gallery of the Art-Union<\/em>, May 1849, print from <em>Bulletin of the American Art-Union.<sup class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote \" data-mfn=\"44\" data-mfn-post-scope=\"00000000000004170000000000000000_361\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-44\">44<\/a><\/sup><span id=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-44\" role=\"tooltip\" class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote__note\" tabindex=\"0\" data-mfn=\"44\">Kenneth J. Meyers, \u201cThe Public Display of Art in New York City, 1664-1914,\u201d in Rave Reviews ed. David B. Dearinger (New York: National Academy of Design, 2000), 41.<\/span><\/em><\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p><strong>The Proliferation of Periodicals and the Development of a Public Voice<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>The Art-Union was ultimately brought down by the public press, which amassed popularity and influence from the mid-century onward.\u00a0 As the prosperous economy of the late 1840s attracted immigrants, Manhattan\u2019s population boomed, increasing from about half a million in 1850 to over 800,000 by 1860.<sup class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote \" data-mfn=\"45\" data-mfn-post-scope=\"00000000000004170000000000000000_361\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-45\">45<\/a><\/sup><span id=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-45\" role=\"tooltip\" class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote__note\" tabindex=\"0\" data-mfn=\"45\">Kenneth J. Meyers, \u201cThe Public Display of Art in New York City, 1664-1914,\u201d in Rave Reviews ed. David B. Dearinger (New York: National Academy of Design, 2000), 39.<\/span>\u00a0The mid-century also marked the development of the American department store and the beginning of the proliferation of print media for the public.\u00a0While the <em>Herald <\/em>was founded in 1835, the <em>New York Tribune <\/em>followed shortly after in 1841.\u00a0 By the 1850s, the<em>New York Tribune\u00a0<\/em>was the city\u2019s largest daily paper, achieving circulation of approximately 200,000.<sup class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote \" data-mfn=\"46\" data-mfn-post-scope=\"00000000000004170000000000000000_361\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-46\">46<\/a><\/sup><span id=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-46\" role=\"tooltip\" class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote__note\" tabindex=\"0\" data-mfn=\"46\">Kenneth J. Meyers, \u201cThe Public Display of Art in New York City, 1664-1914,\u201d in Rave Reviews ed. David B. Dearinger (New York: National Academy of Design, 2000), 39.<\/span>\u00a0 The <em>New York Times <\/em>followed shortly after, publishing its first issue in September of 1851.\u00a0 Fine arts periodicals evolved alongside news media, oftentimes supplementing individual galleries and associations, or serving as a platform for artistic critics to broadcast their opinions.\u00a0 Along with the periodicals mentioned above, the <em>Photographic art journal <\/em>emerged in 1851 and had a nine year run, while both the <em>Illustrated Magazine of Art <\/em>and <em>Lantern <\/em>were founded in 1852.\u00a0 <em>The Crayon: A Journal Devoted to the Graphic Arts &amp; the Literature Related to Them,<\/em>was founded and edited by William Stillman and John Duran in 1855.<sup class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote \" data-mfn=\"47\" data-mfn-post-scope=\"00000000000004170000000000000000_361\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-47\">47<\/a><\/sup><span id=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-47\" role=\"tooltip\" class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote__note\" tabindex=\"0\" data-mfn=\"47\">Rosetti Archive, \u201cPeriodicals\u201d (web page), Rosetti Archive (website), accessed May 6, 2020, http:\/\/www.rossettiarchive.org\/racs\/periodicals.rac.html.<\/span>\u00a0 A year later, the <em>Cosmopolitan Art Journal <\/em>was published by the Cosmopolitan Art Association, which attempted to replace the American Art-Union in the mid-fifties, although it did not survive the Civil War.<sup class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote \" data-mfn=\"48\" data-mfn-post-scope=\"00000000000004170000000000000000_361\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-48\">48<\/a><\/sup><span id=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-48\" role=\"tooltip\" class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote__note\" tabindex=\"0\" data-mfn=\"48\">Klein, \u201cArt and Authority in Antebellum New York City,\u201d 1559.<\/span>\u00a0New publications continued to emerge for the remainder of the nineteenth-century, as artistic discourse multiplied in America.<\/p>\n<p>In this age of periodicals, it mattered more than ever to have access to the various perspectives print media provided, especially if one was to cultivate appropriate artistic taste. On February 7, 1852 in Mr. Diogenes\u2019 the <em>Lantern\u2014<\/em>a short lived satirical journal<em>\u2014<\/em>published an article titled \u201cProgress of the Fine Arts in America,\u201d written under the pseudonym J. Bull Caulkney, as a letter from an English gentleman travelling through the United States.\u00a0 \u00a0Beginning in the eighteenth century, John Bull became a national personification of England, especially in political cartoons and other graphic representations.\u00a0 Therefore, the author was not a real person, but instead embodied the cultured country of England as he criticized American art\u2019s prospects in the context of the \u201cbarbarous\u201d country\u2019s general lack of refinement. \u00a0He goes on to speak of the various methods of art viewing available to Americans.\u00a0 After mentioning the \u201cgreat gallery\u201d of the American Art-Union, he states\u00a0\u201cthe annual lottery of this institution was to have been drawn some time ago; but its plan prohibits more than five dollars (one pound English), being given for any one picture, the managers have wisely determined to postpone the drawing until they have purchased as many pictures as there are subscribers, so that each will be sure of one.\u00a0This must be admitted to be an extraordinary indication of progress in the arts.\u201d\u00a0His satirical commentary sarcastically re-enacts Willis and Fisher\u2019s criticism of the American Art-Union and its propensity for mediocrity, before he moves on to belittling the National Academy of Design.\u00a0 In regards to the National Academy, he claims \u201cI have seen nothing of it, to speak of.\u00a0They say, however, that its intentions are much better than its designs.\u00a0 It is certainly to be hoped so.\u201d\u00a0 With this comment, he disparages the attempts to cultivate an American art in a broader society that lacks the cultural heritage of Europe.<sup class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote \" data-mfn=\"49\" data-mfn-post-scope=\"00000000000004170000000000000000_361\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-49\">49<\/a><\/sup><span id=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-49\" role=\"tooltip\" class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote__note\" tabindex=\"0\" data-mfn=\"49\">\u201cProgress of the Fine Arts in America,\u201d The Lantern, February 7, 1852, p. 46.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><em>The Crayon <\/em>espoused Ruskinian tenets of aestheticism, republishing a large amount of John Ruskin\u2019s work to share it with the American public.<sup class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote \" data-mfn=\"50\" data-mfn-post-scope=\"00000000000004170000000000000000_361\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-50\">50<\/a><\/sup><span id=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-50\" role=\"tooltip\" class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote__note\" tabindex=\"0\" data-mfn=\"50\">Rosetti Archive, \u201cPeriodicals\u201d (web page), Rosetti Archive (website), accessed May 6, 2020, http:\/\/www.rossettiarchive.org\/racs\/periodicals.rac.html.<\/span>\u00a0The journal begun as a weekly 16-page publication, quickly evolving into a 32-page monthly publication in 1856 that charged just 3 dollars for a yearly subscription.<sup class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote \" data-mfn=\"51\" data-mfn-post-scope=\"00000000000004170000000000000000_361\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-51\">51<\/a><\/sup><span id=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-51\" role=\"tooltip\" class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote__note\" tabindex=\"0\" data-mfn=\"51\">Rosetti Archive, \u201cPeriodicals\u201d (web page), Rosetti Archive (website), accessed May 6, 2020, http:\/\/www.rossettiarchive.org\/racs\/periodicals.rac.html.<\/span>\u00a0 It has been observed by Frank Luther Mott in his study of American Magazines, as the best art journal of its period, particularly because of its vast scope and convincing authority.<sup class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote \" data-mfn=\"52\" data-mfn-post-scope=\"00000000000004170000000000000000_361\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-52\">52<\/a><\/sup><span id=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-52\" role=\"tooltip\" class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote__note\" tabindex=\"0\" data-mfn=\"52\">Rosetti Archive, \u201cPeriodicals\u201d (web page), Rosetti Archive (website), accessed May 6, 2020, http:\/\/www.rossettiarchive.org\/racs\/periodicals.rac.html.<\/span>\u00a0 In 1855, <em>The Crayon <\/em>reviewed the Academy\u2019s 30<sup>th\u00a0<\/sup>annual exhibition, characterizing the display and its rooms as small, although the show offered more choice than previous exhibitions.<sup class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote \" data-mfn=\"53\" data-mfn-post-scope=\"00000000000004170000000000000000_361\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-53\">53<\/a><\/sup><span id=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-53\" role=\"tooltip\" class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote__note\" tabindex=\"0\" data-mfn=\"53\">\u201cThe National Academy of Design,\u201d Crayon March 21, 1855, p. 186.<\/span>\u00a0 The journal goes on to suggest that despite this \u201cthere are still, we think, too many poor portraits and <em>absolutely bad <\/em>pictures, which neither honor the artists nor delight the public.\u201d<sup class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote \" data-mfn=\"54\" data-mfn-post-scope=\"00000000000004170000000000000000_361\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-54\">54<\/a><\/sup><span id=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-54\" role=\"tooltip\" class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote__note\" tabindex=\"0\" data-mfn=\"54\">\u201cThe National Academy of Design,\u201d Crayon March 21, 1855, p. 186.<\/span>\u00a0 The article goes onto address the few strong pictures in the exhibition, praising Asher B. Durand\u2019s <em>In the Woods, <\/em>for its unusually good quality and \u201calmost pre-Raphaelite truth of detail.\u201d<sup class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote \" data-mfn=\"55\" data-mfn-post-scope=\"00000000000004170000000000000000_361\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-55\">55<\/a><\/sup><span id=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-55\" role=\"tooltip\" class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote__note\" tabindex=\"0\" data-mfn=\"55\">\u201cThe National Academy of Design,\u201d Crayon March 21, 1855, p. 186.<\/span>\u00a0 Durand\u2019s painting was a full-scale, vertically oriented, finished landscape that depicted a slightly cropped and narrow view of a forest glade.\u00a0 The work emphasizes the visual details and minutia of the forest\u2019s interior while unequivocally placing the viewer\u2014manipulating their viewpoint so the foreground matches the spectator\u2019s\u2014in the woods. The clarity and almost scientific specificity mimics a sharp focus which signals the viewer\u2019s proximity to the objects. While<em>The Crayon <\/em>praised Durand\u2019s exactness, it was not the only publication to address <em>In the Woods. \u00a0<\/em>In fact, the painting divided critical opinion across various periodicals.<\/p>\n<p>In \u201cDefining Landscape Painting in Nineteenth-Century American Critical Discourse.\u00a0Or, Should Art \u2018Deal in Wares the Age Has Need of\u2019?\u201d Karen L. Georgi unpacks the critical reception of landscape painting, employing Durand\u2019s painting as a case study. \u00a0Although Georgi notes that American art criticism in this moment \u201ccannot well be described as provocative or even particularly accomplished, the rhetorical choices are often instructive.\u201d<sup class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote \" data-mfn=\"56\" data-mfn-post-scope=\"00000000000004170000000000000000_361\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-56\">56<\/a><\/sup><span id=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-56\" role=\"tooltip\" class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote__note\" tabindex=\"0\" data-mfn=\"56\">Karen L. Georgi, \u201cDefining Landscape Painting in Nineteenth-Century American Critical Discourse. Or, Should Art \u2018Deal in Wares the Age Has Need of\u2019?\u201d Oxford Art Journal 29 no. 2 (2006): 229.<\/span>\u00a0 Engaging with <em>Putnam\u2019s Monthly Magazine of American Literature, Science, and Art <\/em>and the <em>New York Times <\/em>conflicting reviews, she argues that the terms of the debate around landscape painting made nature function as a metaphor, symbolizing the weighty American values\u2014like religion, nationalism, and liberty\u2014that characterized the larger debate over the significance of American landscapes and, by extension, the purpose of American art.<sup class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote \" data-mfn=\"57\" data-mfn-post-scope=\"00000000000004170000000000000000_361\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-57\">57<\/a><\/sup><span id=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-57\" role=\"tooltip\" class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote__note\" tabindex=\"0\" data-mfn=\"57\">Georgi, \u201cDefining Landscape Painting in Nineteenth-Century American Critical Discourse,\u201d 229.<\/span>\u00a0The nineteenth-century saw the rise and fall of the first cohesive artistic movement in America, known as the Hudson River School.\u00a0 Lasting approximately half a century from 1830 to 1880, the movement was characterized by naturalistic, picturesque American landscapes.<sup class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote \" data-mfn=\"58\" data-mfn-post-scope=\"00000000000004170000000000000000_361\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-58\">58<\/a><\/sup><span id=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-58\" role=\"tooltip\" class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote__note\" tabindex=\"0\" data-mfn=\"58\">Angela L Miller \u201cNature\u2019s Transformations: The Meaning of the Picnic Theme in Nineteenth-Century American Art\u201d Winterthur Portfolio 24 no. 2\/3 (Summer-Autumn, 1989): 113.<\/span>\u00a0 According to critics, a true landscape had to present the viewer with a narrative which, as Georgi suggests, re-enacted man\u2019s relationship with and, ultimately, mastery over nature.<sup class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote \" data-mfn=\"59\" data-mfn-post-scope=\"00000000000004170000000000000000_361\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-59\">59<\/a><\/sup><span id=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-59\" role=\"tooltip\" class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote__note\" tabindex=\"0\" data-mfn=\"59\">Georgi, \u201cDefining Landscape Painting in Nineteenth-Century American Critical Discourse,\u201d 231.<\/span>\u00a0 The cropped composition and its vertical orientation\u2014lacking in peripheral vision\u2014places the viewer in a chronological narrative.\u00a0 In the strict ordering of the natural world, the successful landscape painter rendered harmony and symmetry in the face of disorder, leveraging narrative form to present a cohesive ideal which recreates man\u2019s imposition of order.<sup class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote \" data-mfn=\"60\" data-mfn-post-scope=\"00000000000004170000000000000000_361\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-60\">60<\/a><\/sup><span id=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-60\" role=\"tooltip\" class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote__note\" tabindex=\"0\" data-mfn=\"60\">Georgi, \u201cDefining Landscape Painting in Nineteenth-Century American Critical Discourse,\u201d 231.<\/span>\u00a0 In doing so, the artists elevated the value of the art object by leveraging geometric harmony\u2019s association with the divine organizing presence of God.<sup class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote \" data-mfn=\"61\" data-mfn-post-scope=\"00000000000004170000000000000000_361\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-61\">61<\/a><\/sup><span id=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-61\" role=\"tooltip\" class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote__note\" tabindex=\"0\" data-mfn=\"61\">Georgi, \u201cDefining Landscape Painting in Nineteenth-Century American Critical Discourse,\u201d 232.<\/span>\u00a0 Durand\u2019s steadfast loyalty to rendering the natural world allowed some critics to doubt his use of narrative.\u00a0 However, it was precisely his privileging of naturalism over imagination that characterized this younger generation of artists as they made the genre their own in the midst of a rapidly growing economy.<\/p>\n<p>Georgi centers her argument around the critical disparity in the piece\u2019s reception between the two publications<em>.\u00a0 <\/em>Although Durand\u2019s paintings were generally well-liked by the press, <em>In the Woods <\/em>was controversial, polarizing critical opinion depending on how critics interpreted either the importance or insignificance of a painting which dwells on the minute details of the material world.\u00a0 However, as Georgi argues, the very question itself brought other fundamental concerns to light, as critics responded to Durand\u2019s surprising landscape employing the language of class, labour, and materialism.\u00a0 She suggests that the debate centered around whether the painting was a landscape or study, imagination or imitation.\u00a0 Georgi investigates this dichotomy and its relationship to the cultural factors which impacted its critical reception.<sup class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote \" data-mfn=\"62\" data-mfn-post-scope=\"00000000000004170000000000000000_361\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-62\">62<\/a><\/sup><span id=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-62\" role=\"tooltip\" class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote__note\" tabindex=\"0\" data-mfn=\"62\">Georgi, \u201cDefining Landscape Painting in Nineteenth-Century American Critical Discourse,\u201d 235.<\/span><\/p>\n<p>As in the <em>Crayon, <\/em>both reviews began by addressing the Academy\u2019s shortcomings, and the bleaker reality of American art in general.<sup class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote \" data-mfn=\"63\" data-mfn-post-scope=\"00000000000004170000000000000000_361\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-63\">63<\/a><\/sup><span id=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-63\" role=\"tooltip\" class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote__note\" tabindex=\"0\" data-mfn=\"63\">Georgi, \u201cDefining Landscape Painting in Nineteenth-Century American Critical Discourse,\u201d 241.<\/span>\u00a0 The <em>Putnam\u2019s<\/em>reviewer goes on to classify Thomas Cole and his imaginative landscapes as outdated, sentimental and un-American.<sup class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote \" data-mfn=\"64\" data-mfn-post-scope=\"00000000000004170000000000000000_361\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-64\">64<\/a><\/sup><span id=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-64\" role=\"tooltip\" class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote__note\" tabindex=\"0\" data-mfn=\"64\">Georgi, \u201cDefining Landscape Painting in Nineteenth-Century American Critical Discourse,\u201d 242.<\/span>\u00a0 Cole contrasts with Durand\u2019s younger generation of artists and their focus on conveying an expression of the world around them that is simultaneously naturalistic and idealized.<sup class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote \" data-mfn=\"65\" data-mfn-post-scope=\"00000000000004170000000000000000_361\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-65\">65<\/a><\/sup><span id=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-65\" role=\"tooltip\" class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote__note\" tabindex=\"0\" data-mfn=\"65\">Georgi, \u201cDefining Landscape Painting in Nineteenth-Century American Critical Discourse,\u201d 242.<\/span>\u00a0 Like <em>The Crayon, Putnam\u2019s <\/em>employed a pictorial vocabulary to find meaning and significance in the purely visual experience, as artists straddled the line between real and ideal.<sup class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote \" data-mfn=\"66\" data-mfn-post-scope=\"00000000000004170000000000000000_361\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-66\">66<\/a><\/sup><span id=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-66\" role=\"tooltip\" class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote__note\" tabindex=\"0\" data-mfn=\"66\">Georgi, \u201cDefining Landscape Painting in Nineteenth-Century American Critical Discourse,\u201d 245.<\/span>\u00a0This interpretation argues Durand\u2019s <em>In the Woods <\/em>was a particularly successful landscape because it privileged the minutiae of nature\u2019s details, suggesting that representation is significant in itself, despite the fact that higher meaning had traditionally been found in the abstract.<sup class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote \" data-mfn=\"67\" data-mfn-post-scope=\"00000000000004170000000000000000_361\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-67\">67<\/a><\/sup><span id=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-67\" role=\"tooltip\" class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote__note\" tabindex=\"0\" data-mfn=\"67\">Georgi, \u201cDefining Landscape Painting in Nineteenth-Century American Critical Discourse,\u201d 244.<\/span>\u00a0The <em>New York Times, <\/em>on the other hand, was far more skeptical, dismissing the work as a mere accumulation of parts.<sup class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote \" data-mfn=\"68\" data-mfn-post-scope=\"00000000000004170000000000000000_361\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-68\">68<\/a><\/sup><span id=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-68\" role=\"tooltip\" class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote__note\" tabindex=\"0\" data-mfn=\"68\">Georgi, \u201cDefining Landscape Painting in Nineteenth-Century American Critical Discourse,\u201d 244.<\/span>\u00a0 The particularized visual detail renders the depiction completely useless and denies it the status of art by relating it to commodity production, thus refuting art\u2019s object-hood and relationship to materialism.<sup class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote \" data-mfn=\"69\" data-mfn-post-scope=\"00000000000004170000000000000000_361\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-69\">69<\/a><\/sup><span id=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-69\" role=\"tooltip\" class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote__note\" tabindex=\"0\" data-mfn=\"69\">Georgi, \u201cDefining Landscape Painting in Nineteenth-Century American Critical Discourse,\u201d 244.<\/span> These reviews represent entirely different interpretations of the same aesthetic qualities, displaying polarized opinions surrounding art\u2019s higher meaning and fundamental value.<sup class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote \" data-mfn=\"70\" data-mfn-post-scope=\"00000000000004170000000000000000_361\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-70\">70<\/a><\/sup><span id=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-70\" role=\"tooltip\" class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote__note\" tabindex=\"0\" data-mfn=\"70\">Georgi, \u201cDefining Landscape Painting in Nineteenth-Century American Critical Discourse,\u201d 243.<\/span>\u00a0 Georgi argues that this is indicative of \u201ca correlation between a populist, self-proclaimed progressive definition of art and a preference for the careful attention to the objects of the material world.\u201d<sup class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote \" data-mfn=\"71\" data-mfn-post-scope=\"00000000000004170000000000000000_361\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-71\">71<\/a><\/sup><span id=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-71\" role=\"tooltip\" class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote__note\" tabindex=\"0\" data-mfn=\"71\">Georgi, \u201cDefining Landscape Painting in Nineteenth-Century American Critical Discourse,\u201d 243.<\/span>\u00a0 Her article concludes that the discursive attention paid to the natural world was indicative of the anxiety surrounding a rapidly changing society, and specifically, around the rise of consumerism.<sup class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote \" data-mfn=\"72\" data-mfn-post-scope=\"00000000000004170000000000000000_361\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-72\">72<\/a><\/sup><span id=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-72\" role=\"tooltip\" class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote__note\" tabindex=\"0\" data-mfn=\"72\">Georgi, \u201cDefining Landscape Painting in Nineteenth-Century American Critical Discourse,\u201d 244.<\/span>\u00a0 Given that the commodity economy focuses on interpreting surfaces, these details and their materialism become significant in their own right in the \u00a0democratic <em>Putnam\u2019s <\/em>publication.<\/p>\n<p><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"alignnone wp-image-410\" src=\"https:\/\/courses.bowdoin.edu\/art-history-3570-spring-2020\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/368\/2020\/05\/main-image-242x300.jpeg\" alt=\"\" width=\"297\" height=\"368\" srcset=\"https:\/\/courses.bowdoin.edu\/art-history-3570-spring-2020\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/368\/2020\/05\/main-image-242x300.jpeg 242w, https:\/\/courses.bowdoin.edu\/art-history-3570-spring-2020\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/368\/2020\/05\/main-image-768x953.jpeg 768w, https:\/\/courses.bowdoin.edu\/art-history-3570-spring-2020\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/368\/2020\/05\/main-image.jpeg 825w\" sizes=\"auto, (max-width: 297px) 100vw, 297px\" \/><\/p>\n<p>Figure 4. \u00a0<em>In the Woods, <\/em>Asher Brown Durand, 1855, oil on canvas, 60 x 48 inches, The Metropolitan Museum of Art.<\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p><strong>Founding the Metropolitan Museum <\/strong><\/p>\n<p>From 1861 to 1865, the Civil War provided a thriving market for American art, but by the war\u2019s end, American artists were already reinventing themselves.\u00a0 In 1863, a group of young artists formed the first self-conscious \u201cschool\u201d of artists, naming themselves the Association for the Advancement of Truth in Art.\u00a0 The group labelled themselves American Ruskinians, and immediately founded <em>The New Path, <\/em>a monthly art journal that condemned prominent American painters as formalists who believed they were painting nature, but were in fact, just rendering outdated pictorial conventions. <em>\u00a0<\/em>Its editor Clarence Cook was a Harvard graduate in architecture, who later emerged one of the most significant commentators of his generation once he was named art critic of the <em>New York Tribune <\/em>in 1864. \u00a0He held his position at the <em>Tribune <\/em>until 1883, when he took over <em>The Studio, <\/em>an illustrated monthly journal devoted to the fine arts.\u00a0 Cook moved beyond his Ruskinian insistence on capturing the minutia of nature at the end of the 1860s, but he continued to criticize mainstream American artists as provincial in their failure to\u00a0 compare to European contemporary art\u2019s innovation.<sup class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote \" data-mfn=\"73\" data-mfn-post-scope=\"00000000000004170000000000000000_361\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-73\">73<\/a><\/sup><span id=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-73\" role=\"tooltip\" class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote__note\" tabindex=\"0\" data-mfn=\"73\">Kenneth J. Meyers, \u201cThe Public Display of Art in New York City, 1664-1914,\u201d in Rave Reviews ed. David B. Dearinger (New York: National Academy of Design, 2000), 45.<\/span><\/p>\n<p>In June of 1867, the <em>Tribune\u2014<\/em>presumably Clarence Cook\u2014was reviled by the poverty of the 41<sup>st<\/sup>annual exhibition at the Academy.\u00a0 He finds fault in the exhibition\u2019s inclusivity, arguing that it would be impossible for all six hundred works in one particular show in France to be good, let alone in America, \u201cwhere there is no experience in Art worth mentioning, where there are no traditions, where there is no proper training.\u201d<sup class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote \" data-mfn=\"74\" data-mfn-post-scope=\"00000000000004170000000000000000_361\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-74\">74<\/a><\/sup><span id=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-74\" role=\"tooltip\" class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote__note\" tabindex=\"0\" data-mfn=\"74\">\u201cThe National Academy of Design,\u201d The New York Tribune, June 14, 1867, p. 2.<\/span>\u00a0\u00a0 However, he argues that there is no alternative to exhibiting so many pictures, because there are no reliable judges that might decide which to include, and the show would be so small that \u201cit would be hardly worthwhile to have erected the Academy Building to hold it.\u201d<sup class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote \" data-mfn=\"75\" data-mfn-post-scope=\"00000000000004170000000000000000_361\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-75\">75<\/a><\/sup><span id=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-75\" role=\"tooltip\" class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote__note\" tabindex=\"0\" data-mfn=\"75\">\u201cThe National Academy of Design,\u201d The New York Tribune, June 14, 1867, p. 2.<\/span>\u00a0 While the older artists built up the Academy\u2014doing their best to advance art in a moment when the general public was disinterested and technical ability was rare\u2014Cook claims that the American public will have to wait a few more years, as more students study high art, and effective teachers disseminate artistic knowledge into a broader system of education, before American art might mature into a lineage comparable to Europe\u2019s.<sup class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote \" data-mfn=\"76\" data-mfn-post-scope=\"00000000000004170000000000000000_361\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-76\">76<\/a><\/sup><span id=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-76\" role=\"tooltip\" class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote__note\" tabindex=\"0\" data-mfn=\"76\">\u201cThe National Academy of Design,\u201d The New York Tribune, June 14, 1867, p. 2.<\/span>\u00a0 Kenneth Meyers suggests that Cook\u2019s criticism brought with it a new cosmopolitanism that aided the transformation of New York\u2019s art world in the decades after the Civil War.<sup class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote \" data-mfn=\"77\" data-mfn-post-scope=\"00000000000004170000000000000000_361\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-77\">77<\/a><\/sup><span id=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-77\" role=\"tooltip\" class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote__note\" tabindex=\"0\" data-mfn=\"77\">Kenneth J. Meyers, \u201cThe Public Display of Art in New York City, 1664-1914,\u201d in Rave Reviews ed. David B. Dearinger (New York: National Academy of Design, 2000), 45.<\/span>\u00a0 However, the sixties also saw the advent of <em>Watson\u2019s Weekly Art Journal, The Aldine: A Typographic Art Journal, <\/em>and <em>Appleton\u2019s Journal, <\/em>each of which expanded artistic discourse in New York City<em>.\u00a0 <\/em><\/p>\n<p>In the same year, the Universal Exposition in Paris drew a substantial group of New York\u2019s prominent collectors of American art, who\u2014following their works across the Atlantic\u2014were exposed to leading European artists.\u00a0 They returned home, eager to learn more about and acquire art from abroad.\u00a0 The sale of European art boomed throughout the seventies in New York, meaning the rapid expansion of commercialized galleries specializing in the sale of European art.\u00a0 Concurrently, American artists and collectors flocked to Europe, promoting transatlantic communication that manifested in the popular American impressionist movement. \u00a0While some American artists lobbied for protectionary measures like increased tariffs in the midst of the growing demand for European art, Cook, along with other leading critics and journalists, argued that American art was desperately in need of this competition.<sup class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote \" data-mfn=\"78\" data-mfn-post-scope=\"00000000000004170000000000000000_361\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-78\">78<\/a><\/sup><span id=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-78\" role=\"tooltip\" class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote__note\" tabindex=\"0\" data-mfn=\"78\">Kenneth J. Meyers, \u201cThe Public Display of Art in New York City, 1664-1914,\u201d in Rave Reviews ed. David B. Dearinger (New York: National Academy of Design, 2000), 45.<\/span><\/p>\n<p>It was in this context that John Jay, wealthy lawyer and financier, as well as a noted proponent of the Art-Union, initiated the establishment of the Metropolitan Museum of Art. The first meeting, which was held\u00a0 by New York\u2019s Union League Club in 1869, hosted four men who had previously been American Art-Union managers. \u00a0It also included William Cullen Bryant, an American poet and journalist that urged the gentlemen to promote art\u2019s \u201cwholesome, ennobling, instructive\u201d influence in the face of the \u201ctemptations to vice in this great and too rapidly growing capital.\u201d\u00a0 Although the museum emphasized its role in educating the public, its intended audience was far smaller than the American Art-Union\u2019s.\u00a0 In fact, they made the museum less accessible to the working classes by limiting evening hours and free admission to specific days, alongside implementing unspoken rules of decorum around spectatorship.\u00a0 The museum was constructed with the use of trustees, who relied on a broad range of funding\u2014including donations, governmental allowances and fees\u2014as opposed to public subscriptions.\u00a0 Trustees controlled the contents of the galleries, filling the museum with art purchases from around the world, alongside the donations it received from well-off art collectors.\u00a0 In abandoning the direct patronage of American art and introducing barriers to entry, the MET advertised itself as a preserve of excellence available only to the enlightened few.<sup class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote \" data-mfn=\"79\" data-mfn-post-scope=\"00000000000004170000000000000000_361\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-79\">79<\/a><\/sup><span id=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-79\" role=\"tooltip\" class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote__note\" tabindex=\"0\" data-mfn=\"79\">Klein, \u201cArt and Authority in Antebellum New York City,\u201d 1560.<\/span><\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p><strong>Professionalizing the Woman Artist<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>Founded in 1859 by self-educated industrialist Peter Cooper, The Cooper Union for the Advancement of Science and Art made artistic education available to women.\u00a0Quickly after it was established, Cooper Union offered a broad selection of daytime art classes for women.\u00a0 In the same year, three drawings by \u201cPupils of the New York School of Design for Women, Cooper Institute\u201d were exhibited in the National Academy.\u00a0 The Academy openly supported female participation and professionalization in art, and its inclusive exhibition policy meant that artists of diverse skillsets, identities, and backgrounds were showcased alongside one another. \u00a0In fact, the National Academy judges accepted almost every painting submitted to its annual exhibition until at least 1860.\u00a0<em>The Crayon <\/em>highlighted its democratic hanging policy in a review of the 35<sup>th\u00a0<\/sup>annual exhibition, stating \u201cno exhibition in the world\u2014certainly not in Europe\u2014is hung with the same consideration for the rights of all.\u201d\u00a0In 1867, the National Academy even opened its galleries to host exhibitions by the Ladies\u2019 Art Association. \u00a0As American artists travelled to study abroad in Europe in the 1870s, ambitious middle-class ladies flocked to art schools in America and Europe, marking a moment in history in which women were finally given the opportunity to engage in an artistic education comparable to men.\u00a0 This combination of education and institutional exhibition venues allowed for their artistic success.<sup class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote \" data-mfn=\"80\" data-mfn-post-scope=\"00000000000004170000000000000000_361\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-80\">80<\/a><\/sup><span id=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-80\" role=\"tooltip\" class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote__note\" tabindex=\"0\" data-mfn=\"80\">April F. Masten, Art Work: Women Artists and Democracy in mid-Nineteenth Century New York, (Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 2008), 13.<\/span><\/p>\n<p>Women made the most of their opportunities, employing their art to reinforce proper American values and standards of refinement, while simultaneously subverting stereotypes of domesticity by having a public facing career.\u00a0Kirsten Swinth\u2019s <em>Painting Professionals: Women Artists and the Development of Modern American Art, 1870-1930, <\/em>investigates the professionalization of women artists in this period, examining the records of successful women artists that were associated with New York Arts Students League, Philadelphia\u2019s Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts, and Boston\u2019s Museum of Fine Arts School.\u00a0\u00a0While the National Academy group exhibitions provided a more inclusive space for women to exhibit their work, women still faced discrimination and significant obstacles to fame.\u00a0 They often turned to less prestigious media such as water colors or home decoration in the face of male competition that dominated the realm of \u201chigh art.\u201d\u00a0 In <em>At Home in the Studio: The Professionalization of Women Artists in America, <\/em>art historian Laura Prieto argues that, for these reasons, women and men had vastly different artistic networks. \u00a0Over two chapters, Prieto charts the emergence of the lady amateur ideal in antebellum America, which served to both help and hurt women in attaining their status as professional artists later on in the century.<sup class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote \" data-mfn=\"81\" data-mfn-post-scope=\"00000000000004170000000000000000_361\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-81\">81<\/a><\/sup><span id=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-81\" role=\"tooltip\" class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote__note\" tabindex=\"0\" data-mfn=\"81\">Karen J. Blair, \u201cReviews of Books: Painting Professionals: Women Artists and the Development of Modern American Art, 1870-1930 by Kirsten Swinth; At Home in the Studio: The Professionalization of Women Artists in America by Laura R. Prieto,\u201d The American Historical Review 107 no. 5 (2002): 1571-1572.<\/span><\/p>\n<p>Although women became a permanent part of the Academy schools after the Civil War, few of them received regular critical attention in the press.<sup class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote \" data-mfn=\"82\" data-mfn-post-scope=\"00000000000004170000000000000000_361\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-82\">82<\/a><\/sup><span id=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-82\" role=\"tooltip\" class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote__note\" tabindex=\"0\" data-mfn=\"82\">Masten, Art Work, 16.<\/span>\u00a0 With the public\u2019s interest in foreign art, the demand for American art bottomed out in the 1880s, paralleling the demise of landscape painting.\u00a0 At this moment, the Academy came under siege by progressive artists and critics who opposed its inclusive nature.\u00a0 As the annual exhibitions became less popular throughout the decade, the list of alternative artistic venues at the back of the National Academy Notes pamphlets grows in length. \u00a0Titled \u201cArt Attractions of New York,\u201d the 1889 section recommends the Metropolitan Museum of Art as the most interesting permanent exhibition in the city, and then it goes on to list various libraries, societies, clubs, churches, and associations that display art.<sup class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote \" data-mfn=\"83\" data-mfn-post-scope=\"00000000000004170000000000000000_361\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-83\">83<\/a><\/sup><span id=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-83\" role=\"tooltip\" class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote__note\" tabindex=\"0\" data-mfn=\"83\">Charles Kurtz, National Academy Notes no. 9, 1889.<\/span>\u00a0 The proliferation of various artistic associations served to further divide artistic networks on the basis of gender, excluding women and their art from more selective and elite exhibition spaces that might raise their value.<sup class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote \" data-mfn=\"84\" data-mfn-post-scope=\"00000000000004170000000000000000_361\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-84\">84<\/a><\/sup><span id=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-84\" role=\"tooltip\" class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote__note\" tabindex=\"0\" data-mfn=\"84\">Blair, \u201cReviews of Books,\u201d 1571.<\/span>\u00a0 Despite this, the US Census of 1890 counted female participation in the arts\u2014as artists, sculptors, and art teachers\u2014at a peak 48%.<sup class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote \" data-mfn=\"85\" data-mfn-post-scope=\"00000000000004170000000000000000_361\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-85\">85<\/a><\/sup><span id=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-85\" role=\"tooltip\" class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote__note\" tabindex=\"0\" data-mfn=\"85\">Blair, \u201cReviews of Books,\u201d 1571.<\/span>\u00a0 While the Academy provided spaces for women, dealers served as gatekeepers\u2014which embodied the crucial function to curate taste\u2014and along with the new artistic associations, they served to marginalize women in the art market.<sup class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote \" data-mfn=\"86\" data-mfn-post-scope=\"00000000000004170000000000000000_361\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-86\">86<\/a><\/sup><span id=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-86\" role=\"tooltip\" class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote__note\" tabindex=\"0\" data-mfn=\"86\">Blair, \u201cReviews of Books,\u201d 1571.<\/span><\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p><strong>The Triumph of the Commercial Gallery and the Rise of Modernism<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>The repudiation of the National Academy of Design paralleled the critical defeminisation of art in the press.\u00a0 The institutional failure to craft a successful national art was indicative of the public\u2019s general distrust in American refinement and cultural taste, in the face of European competition.\u00a0 Swinth suggests that Theodore Roosevelt\u2019s election in 1901 marked a turning point for the development of a virile modernism to match his vigor going into the twentieth century.<\/p>\n<p>Art critics rejected the idea of art for refinement as feminine, low-brow, and mere entertainment.\u00a0In its place, they called for a bold style of self-expression and individuality that became closely entangled with a masculine ethos.\u00a0 Swinth labels this shift as anti-democratic, arguing that it was unconcerned with unifying classes and hostile to mass-consumption, serving to reinforce elitist taste as a form of limited capital.\u00a0 Despite the efforts of various institutions, it is evident that this ideology set the stage for the rich art market characteristic of twentieth-century New York, a century in which the sale of art became increasingly associated with luxury and desire.<sup class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote \" data-mfn=\"87\" data-mfn-post-scope=\"00000000000004170000000000000000_361\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-87\">87<\/a><\/sup><span id=\"mfn-content-00000000000004170000000000000000_361-87\" role=\"tooltip\" class=\"modern-footnotes-footnote__note\" tabindex=\"0\" data-mfn=\"87\">Blair, \u201cReviews of Books,\u201d 1571.<\/span><\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p>Author: Mackenzie Philbrick<\/p>\n<p>Date Written: May 8, 2020<\/p>\n<p><strong>Primary Sources<\/strong><\/p>\n<p><em>The New York Tribune <\/em>archive<\/p>\n<p><em>Bulletin of the American Art-Union<\/em><\/p>\n<p><em>The International Monthly Magazine of Literature, Science &amp; Art<\/em><\/p>\n<p><em>National Academy Notes <\/em><\/p>\n<p><em>The Lantern<\/em><\/p>\n<p><em>The Crayon: A Journal Devoted to the Graphic Arts &amp; the Literature Related to Them<\/em><\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p><strong>Secondary Sources<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>Blair, Karen J.\u00a0 \u201cReviews of Books: Painting Professionals: Women Artists and the Development\u00a0of Modern American Art, 1870-1930 by Kirsten Swinth; At Home in the Studio: The\u00a0Professionalization of Women Artists in America by Laura R. Prieto.\u201d<em>\u00a0 The American <\/em><em>Historical Review <\/em>107 no. 5 (2002): 1571-1572.<\/p>\n<p>Georgi, Karen L. \u201cDefining Landscape Painting in Nineteenth-Century American Critical\u00a0Discourse.\u00a0 Or, Should Art \u2018Deal in Wares the Age Has Need of\u2019?\u201d <em>Oxford Art Journal <\/em>29 no. 2 (2006): 227+229-245.<\/p>\n<p>Klein, Rachel N.\u00a0 \u201cArt and Authority in Antebellum New York City: The Rise and Fall of the\u00a0American Art-Union.\u201d\u00a0<em>The Journal of American History, <\/em>81, no. 4 (March 1995): 1534-1561.<\/p>\n<p>Masten, April F.\u00a0 <em>Art Work: Women Artists and Democracy in mid-Nineteenth Century New <\/em><em>York.\u00a0 <\/em>Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 2008.<\/p>\n<p>Meyers, Kenneth John.\u00a0 \u201cThe Public Display of Art in New York City, 1664-1914.\u201d\u00a0 In <em>Rave <\/em><em>Reviews <\/em>edited by David B. Dearinger.\u00a0 New York: National Academy of Design, 2000, 31-51.<\/p>\n<p>Miller, Angela L.\u00a0 \u201cNature\u2019s Transformations: The Meaning of the Picnic Theme in Nineteenth-Century American Art.\u201d\u00a0<em>Winterthur Portfolio <\/em>24 no. 2\/3 (Summer-Autumn, 1989): 113-138.<\/p>\n<p>Rosetti Archive.\u00a0 \u201cPeriodicals\u201d (web page).\u00a0 Rosetti Archive (website).\u00a0 Accessed May 6, 2020. <u><a href=\"http:\/\/www.rossettiarchive.org\/racs\/periodicals.rac.html\">http:\/\/www.rossettiarchive.org\/racs\/periodicals.rac.html<\/a><\/u>.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>The Search for Patrons: An Overview of American Artistic Institutions &amp; Critical Discourse in Nineteenth-Century New York City Nineteenth-century New York was a rapidly growing port-city that connected the rest of America to the transatlantic continents of Europe and Asia.\u00a0 As the city underwent vast economic expansion, the burgeoning middle class wanted to learn about [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1063,"featured_media":0,"parent":106,"menu_order":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","template":"templates\/template-cover.php","meta":{"footnotes":""},"class_list":["post-361","page","type-page","status-publish","hentry"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/courses.bowdoin.edu\/art-history-3570-spring-2020\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/pages\/361","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/courses.bowdoin.edu\/art-history-3570-spring-2020\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/pages"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/courses.bowdoin.edu\/art-history-3570-spring-2020\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/page"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/courses.bowdoin.edu\/art-history-3570-spring-2020\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/1063"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/courses.bowdoin.edu\/art-history-3570-spring-2020\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=361"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/courses.bowdoin.edu\/art-history-3570-spring-2020\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/pages\/361\/revisions"}],"up":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/courses.bowdoin.edu\/art-history-3570-spring-2020\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/pages\/106"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/courses.bowdoin.edu\/art-history-3570-spring-2020\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=361"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}