Impressionism's American Childe
A new exhibition of works by Childe Hassam, a pioneering interpreter of the French style, highlights his "incorrigibly joyous" break with the past
- By Doug Stewart
- Smithsonian magazine, August 2004, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 4)
Attempting to make art out of urban streetscapes was highly unorthodox in the 1880s. “There were virtually no Boston artists painting this kind of thing at the time,” Weinberg says. In fact, for many Americans after the Civil War— artists, critics and collectors alike—the only fitting subjects were to be found in distant lands or eras, if not atop Mount Olympus itself. “American life is so unpaintable,” a Frenchtrained American painter, Theodore Robinson, wrote a friend in 1883 (though he would later change his mind). “I would like to try a little flight into something Biblical or Mythological.” The hordes of young Americans who journeyed to Europe in the late 19th century to study painting favored studio compositions of heroic warriors or allegorical females painted in fastidious detail and with great technical polish.
In 1886, Hassam, too, began a three-year stay in Paris. At first, he and Maud lived in a decidedly un-Bohemian, fiveroom apartment with a large attached studio on the Boulevard Clichy, overlooking the Opera. “They considered themselves a very proper French family,” says Weinberg of the couple, who never had children. “They even had a French maid!” Hassam enrolled at the renowned “petit atelier” of the Académie Julian. At 27 he was older and more self-assured than most of the other Americans. “The moment I entered the . . . atelier, my eye lit on Hassam,” a fellow student recalled. “I said to myself, ‘There is a man to look out for. . . . ’ ” Hassam devoted himself, he wrote a friend, to “drawing like a slave,” but found the academy atmosphere to be “the personification of routine.” The emphasis on contrived scenes, he said, “crushes all the originality out of the growing men. It tends to put them in a rut and keep them in it.” That spring, Hassam took his easel to the streets of Paris.
At first, his outdoor paintings were a continuation of what he’d done in Boston: candid, rainy-day scenes of carriages and pedestrians rendered with confident polish. One of these, the immense Une Averse—rue Bonaparte, won a spot in the prestigious Paris Salon exhibition in 1887—a coup for a foreigner of any age. But a critic for the Boston Transcript wondered if it wasn’t time for him to “come in out of the rain.”
Perhaps Hassam heeded the barb. More likely, he was influenced by the vibrant, light-filled work of the Impressionists, who had mounted their eighth and final exhibition in Paris the previous year. In paintings such as Grand Prix Day (1887) and Geraniums (1888-89),Hassam demonstrated looser brushwork and a brighter palette than ever before. The paintings also foreshadowed his later reputation as a master of sunlight and shade. In 1919, the New York Times would write that Hassam knew “how to drench [his outdoor scenes] with light and give them air to breathe.”
From Paris, he shipped paintings to exhibitions back home. Before an auction of his work in Boston in 1887, which he called “a matter of life and death” financially, he arranged to give several favored American critics small oils as gifts, along with notes angling for positive reviews. “
One of the things we’ve discovered is how commercially driven Hassam was,” says Weinberg. “He showed paintings everywhere, from New York to Nebraska and points west— small exhibitions, large exhibitions. He never had a personal fortune. He never taught, and he never took on portrait commissions. He had to rely on the sale of his works.”
Satisfied he’d learned all he could in Paris, Hassam, who was about to turn 30, and his wife set sail for the United States in October 1889. The couple settled in New York City, the epicenter of America’s Gilded Age. “He became the unrivaled chronicler of New York,” Weinberg says. “As in Boston and Paris, he was the artist of the avenues.” He kept a succession of studios on or near Fifth Avenue and seldom traveled more than a few blocks to paint. Sometimes he worked from a window or balcony, but often he sketched the passing crowds at street level from a parked carriage, using the opposite seat as his easel. “There is nothing so interesting to me as people,” he remarked in 1892. “I am never tired of observing them in every-day life, as they hurry through the streets on business or saunter down the promenade on pleasure. Humanity in motion is a continual study to me.”
Not all humanity, however. Only two years before, the Danish-born social activist and photographer Jacob Riis had published his searing exposé of tenement life, How the Other Half Lives, but Riis and Hassam might as well have lived on different planets. “Hassam was always depicting the social set that would buy his paintings,” says Weinberg. “There’s no hint that there was a heterogeneous, struggling population in his cities, whether Boston, Paris or New York. Instead, you see a genteel, optimistic view of urban life.”
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