Study of a Ground Plant in Kauterskill Clove

Aaron Draper Shattuck American

Not on view

In the mid-1850s, many of the Hudson River School painters, encouraged by their leader, Asher B. Durand, fell under the spell of the English critic John Ruskin. Ruskin’s “Modern Painters” set a new standard of naturalism based not on the stagelike compositional strategies of the classical landscape, but on the fastidious pictorial replication of nature’s details. Studies like this example have their counterpart in those of other American Ruskinians such as William Trost Richards and are among Shattuck’s most attractive works (see also 65.280.1). The young artist may not have known the identity of the plants in these studies, but his earnest description on a minute scale makes it possible to identify the ground plant as swamp saxifrage.

Study of a Ground Plant in Kauterskill Clove, Aaron Draper Shattuck (1832–1928), Graphite on white-wove paper, American

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