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   Book Info

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Painting in the North: Alaskan Art in the Anchorage Museum of History and Art  
Author: Anchorage Museum Of History and Art
ISBN: 029597320X
Format: Handover
Publish Date: June, 2005
 
     
     
   Book Review
Painting in the North: Alaskan Art in the Anchorage Museum of History and Art

FROM THE PUBLISHER

Beginning in 1741 when European explorers first landed in Alaska, Western artists have attempted to capture the region's magnificent landscape and unique inhabitants. This lavishly illustrated, carefully researched volume explores the rich body of work produced by the visiting and resident artists of Alaska as represented in the remarkable collection of the Anchorage Museum of History and Art. Surveying more than two centuries of Alaskan drawing, painting, and printmaking, this landmark study introduces a long-overlooked chapter of art history. The art of Alaska has evolved along with the territory: Charming, untutored sketches of Arctic scenes led to polished landscapes influenced by the latest European schools of painting. The first culturally biased images of Natives gave way to more sensitive, even romanticized, renderings of the inhabitants and their threatened way of life. Intrepid documentary artists who traveled north with scientific and commercial expeditions were followed by part-time artists attracted by gold and adventure. A new era began in the late nineteenth century when trained painters as well as tourists cruised the Inside Passage. Successful artists from the East Coast and California, including the renowned painters Albert Bierstadt, Thomas Hill, and William Keith, found novel subjects in Alaska's stunning glaciers and imposing mountain ranges. And the wayfaring Rockwell Kent discovered timely inspiration on a remote island in Resurrection Bay. Perhaps the most lasting images of Alaska were created by the four enormously popular resident painters Sydney Laurence, Eustace Ziegler, Theodore Lambert, and Jules Dahlager. Laurence's sublime mountain views were balanced by Ziegler's raucous scenes of fishermen and gamblers, while Lambert and Dahlager each helped reinforce the vision of a harsh but invigorating frontier. Prominent Native artists added an indigenous perspective to the growing number of northern scenes. Alaska's relative isolation end

     



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