Friday, November 4, 2011

WEEK #32 / The Saco River at Conway, New Hampshire

The Saco River at Conway, NH
James Aponovich
oil on canvas, 18" x 24", 2011

The White Mountains of New Hampshire were the original source of inspiration for American painters during the early 19th Century. They sought a visionary Eden here in the wilderness. It was all new and unspoiled. What was new quickly grew old. When The West was opened the painters ( along with the farmers) left New Hampshire for more opulent vistas.
This view of the Saco River Valley is named after one of those painters, Frank Shapleigh. Mount Washington is dominate in the distance.


George Inness
The Lackawanna Valley
oil on canvas, 34" x 50", 1855

Inness was commissioned by the Delaware, Lackawanna and Western Railroad to commemorate the new Roundhouse complex at Scranton, Pennsylvania. Here the instrument of progress is the locomotive and the landscape opened, trees felled and tracks laid. The West was opening.
Both Inness and myself sketched on site. The sketches were then brought to the studio where the actual painters were created.




2 comments:

  1. so happy to come back and see the newest works and words...
    thank you
    marge

    ReplyDelete
  2. Marge,
    Thanks for the comment. Hope to see you soon!
    James

    ReplyDelete