The Essex Canal

Description

Albert Pinkham Ryder was one of the most innovative artists of the late 19th century, creating reductive, yet expressive compositions out of thick, slowly worked paint, combined with glazes, varnishes, and unconventional materials. In The Essex Canal, a waterway faintly meanders from the green-hued foreground to a skim of blue along the horizon, with an expansive sky beyond. A younger generation of American artists celebrated Ryder as an important early modernist, who pushed toward abstraction and focused on the arduous process of painting itself as instrumental to one’s creative vision. Ryder’s reclusiveness only added to his intrigue and mythic status as an artist ahead of his time.

Provenance

John Gellatly, New York, by 1918. Charles Melville Dewey, by 1932; Anderson Galleries, American Art Association sale (Dewey estate); April 8, 1937; Ferargil Galleries, New York, 1937. Jesse Sobol, New York, 1951. Parke-Bernet Galleries, New York, sale, November 15, 1967; Herbert Geist, Chicago, 1967; given by him to the Art Institute of Chicago, 1980.

The Essex Canal

Albert Pinkham Ryder

c. 1896

Accession Number

60239

Medium

Oil on canvas mounted on board

Dimensions

41.3 × 52.1 cm (16 1/4 × 20 1/2 in.)

Classification

painting

Museum

The Art Institute of Chicago

Chicago, United States

Credit Line

Gift of Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Geist