Rising Road with Mount Tamalpais

Percy Gray American
ca. 1910
Not on view
With William Keith, Francis McComas, Lorenzo Latimer, and Sydney Yard, Percy Gray was among the best known of California's Tonalists in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. Gray was especially adept in watercolor. He began his career as a newspaper illustrator in San Francisco, then spent eleven years working in New York for William Randolph Hearst's Journal. While in the East, Gray studied with William Merritt Chase and William Appleton Clark at the art Students League before the Great Earthquake of 1906 drew him back to his native state, where he lived the remainder of his life. Immediately on his return to San Francisco, Gray began painting and exhibiting watercolors in an aesthetic environment that had grown even more receptive to landscape painting. His earlier works, Rising Road with Mount Tamalpais among them, evoke some of Chase's Shinnecock landscapes, as well as the watercolors of Barbizon-style artists such as Dwight Tryon and Henry Farrer, who could elicit a latent grandeur from the prosaically pastoral. Here voluminous clouds answer the treetops and both preside over the dialogue of the curving path and the dormant crest of Mount Tamalpais, in Marin County, which dominates the Bay Area landscape.

Artwork Details

Object Information
  • Title: Rising Road with Mount Tamalpais
  • Artist: Percy Gray (1869–1952)
  • Date: ca. 1910
  • Geography: Made in United States
  • Culture: American
  • Medium: Watercolor on white wove paper
  • Dimensions: 11 x 14 in. (27.9 x 35.6 cm)
  • Credit Line: Gift of Donald C. Whitton, in honor of Robert Emory Johnson, 2006
  • Object Number: 2006.568.1
  • Curatorial Department: The American Wing

More Artwork

Research Resources

The Met provides unparalleled resources for research and welcomes an international community of students and scholars. The Met's Open Access API is where creators and researchers can connect to the The Met collection. Open Access data and public domain images are available for unrestricted commercial and noncommercial use without permission or fee.

To request images under copyright and other restrictions, please use this Image Request form.

Feedback

We continue to research and examine historical and cultural context for objects in The Met collection. If you have comments or questions about this object record, please complete and submit this form. The Museum looks forward to receiving your comments.