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As American settlement expanded westward in the 1860s, the U.S. government undertook large-scale investigations of its new territories. Images of the West: Survey Photography in French Collections, 1860-1880 presents memorable glass-plate photographs from these federal surveys. The selection includes breathtaking views of such iconic sites as Yosemite, as well as lesser-known ethnographic portraits taken by Timothy H. O'Sullivan, William H. Jackson, and William Bell, among others. The accompanying essays discuss how the photographs were used to promote white settlement, how their distribution at home and abroad contributed to the aggrandizement of the American West, and how the exploitative ideology underlying the use of photography extended to attitudes toward both American landscapes and American Indians. The images are all drawn from French public collections, which hold an astonishing number of these U.S. survey photographs. Accompanying an exhibition at the Musée d'Art Américain Giverny, Images of the West provides a critical new examination of a bygone era.
Art of the United States, 1750-2000: Primary Sources presents three centuries of US art through a broad array of historical texts, including writings by artists, critics, patrons, literary figures, and other commentators.
This exhibition catalog, Julia Fish bound by spectrum, presents a fully-illustrated survey of the last decade of Fishs paintings and works on paper. It offers new scholarship around Fishs ongoing project that brings together the disciplines of painting, drawing, and architecture.
On September 29, 2018, before a live audience at Navy Pier in Chicago, international curator Hans Ulrich Obrist conducted his first US Marathon interview session as part of Art Design Chicago, a yearlong celebration of Chicagos art and design legacy initiated by the Terra Foundation for American Art.
Lured by the beauty represented in Claude Monet's artwork, artists from America and across Europe flocked to the French village of Giverny in the late 19th and early 20th-centuries. This work evokes the longevity of impressionism and highlights the role Giverny played in the movement's ascendance.
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