Book Description
Frederic Edwin Church (18261900) traveled the world, captured its beauty in countless paintings, and brought it home to live at Olana, his castle on the Hudson. The name was inspired by a reference Church found to a fortress or a treasury-storehouse in ancient Persia. This extraordinary selection of Churchs paintings from his collection at Olana puts the most cherished of his treasures on full display in a volume that includes eighty color plates.
Churchs paintings, among the most acclaimed examples of art of the Hudson River School, are found in museums and private collections around the globe. However, Church kept some of his art close by during his lifetime. The rich collection that remains at Olana includes about seven hundred pieces, including notebooks, drawings, and oils, both sketches and completed canvases. They cover the full range of Churchs career chronologically and thematically. The highlights from his personal collection are found in the touring exhibition that accompanies this book.
The introduction by John Wilmerding and a substantial essay by Kevin J. Avery place the work into the context of Churchs life and travels and examine Churchs influences and the public reception of his art. Throughout Treasures from Olana, they discuss how profoundly Churchs hilltop home and the surrounding landscape inspired and informed his work. His paintings, in turn, illuminate Olana more than a century after his death.
The Olana Partnership, Hudson, N.Y., and New York States Office of Parks, Recreation, and Historic Preservation, Albany, N.Y., organized Treasures from Olana: Landscapes by Frederic Edwin Church.
About the author
John Wilmerding is Christopher Binyon Sarafim 86 Professor of American Art in the Department of Art and Archeology at Princeton University and visiting curator in the Department of American Art at The Metropolitan Museum of Art. He is author of many books and articles on American painting and was recently reappointed by President George W. Bush to the Committee for the Preservation of the White House.