Morning at Grand Manan

Morning at Grand Manan
nationality
American
birth-death
1837-1908
Creation date
1878
Materials
oil on canvas
Dimensions
25 x 50 in. 42 1/2 x 68 in. (framed)
Currently On View
Location
Paine Early American Painting Gallery
Credit line
Martha Delzell Memorial Fund
Accession number
70.65
Provenance
The artist; Vose Gallery 1878; IMA 1970
Gallery Label

Morning at Grand Manan is a prime example of Luminism, a style characterized by tranquil landscapes, barely visible brushstrokes, precisely rendered detail and glowing light.

Bricher favored working along the North Atlantic coast, including Grand Manan Island, a summer resort in New Brunswick, Canada.

Indianapolis Museum of Art: Highlights of the Collection (2005)

Alfred Bricher was a painter of seascapes, primarily panoramic coastal views rendered in cool, clear colors and sharply defined compositions. He traveled up and down the North Atlantic seaboard, recording on canvas the interactions of light, water, land, and atmosphere. The quiet inlet and large rocky cliffs of Grand Manan Island, a summer resort in New Brunswick, Canada, were among his favorite subjects. This canvas, painted at the peak of Bricher's career, presents a tranquil view of the island, a radiant scene animated by the flowing surf, the rugged profile of the cliffs, and the cluster of sails against the sky at sunrise.

Morning at Grand Manan displays the aesthetic of the Luminist School of painting, which emphasized precise depictions of light and atmosphere in landscapes of panoramic scale. With its clearly defined horizon line, crisp colors, glowing light, and barely visible brushstrokes, Morning at Grand Manan exemplifies Luminist qualities of harmony and order and exhibits the strong sense of geometry that pervades Bricher's work. Bricher's paintings were popular and widely known in his time, and there was a steady market for color lithographs of his picturesque coastal scenes. After 1868, the artist took up painting in watercolor, and in 1873 became a member of the American Watercolor Society. From then on he devoted himself entirely to watercolor.

In Luminism, time stops and the moment is locked in place.
-Art historian Barbara Novak, 1979
Early American

Alfred Thompson Bricher

Morning At Grand Manan, 1878

oil on canvas

25 x 50 in.

Martha Delzell Memorial Fund

Learn More

Alfred Thompson Bricher grew up in Newburyport, Massachusetts and began painting landscapes when he was nineteen.  He studied at the Lowell Institute in Boston and at the academy in Newburyport, Massachusetts, but was primarily self-taught.  He set up a studio in Boston in 1858 and became a popular marine painter whose work was reproduced in numerous chromolithographs.  Bricher was a painter of seascapes, primarily panoramic coastal views rendered in cool, clear colors and sharply defined compositions.  He traveled up and down the North Atlantic seaboard, recording on canvas the interactions of light, water, land, and atmosphere.  Bricher was considered the last of the important American luminist painters whose interest in harmony, order and light was the hallmark of their style.  An observer of a Bricher painting noted: “he makes water sparkle like diamonds in a silver setting.” 

The quiet inlet and large rocky cliffs of Grand Manan Island, a summer resort in New Brunswick, Canada, were among Bricher’s favorite subjects.  This canvas, painted at the peak of Bircher’s career, presents a tranquil view of the island, a radiant scene animated by the flowing surf, the rugged profile of the cliffs, and the cluster of sails against the sky at sunrise. Morning at Grand Manan displays the aesthetic of the Luminist School of painting, which emphasized precise depiction of light and atmosphere in landscapes of panoramic scale. With its clearly defined horizon line, crisp colors, glowing light, and barely visible brushstrokes. Morning at Grand Manan exemplifies Luminist qualities of harmony and order and exhibits the strong sense of geometry that pervades Bricher’s work.

Reference

Jeffrey R. Brown.  Alfred Thompson Bricher (1837-1908), Indianapolis, Indiana: Indianapolis Museum of Art, 1973.  ASIN: B00174YDRY

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