Augustus Pugin, Entrance Hall, Old Exhibition of the Royal Academy when at Somerset House (detail)
Upcoming Exhibition (view all)
Catching Light: European and American Watercolors from the Permanent Collection
When: May – July 2009
Where: Prints and Drawings Galleries
About the show
Watercolor also thrived in the modern period. In the late nineteenth century and early years of the twentieth century, artists, both European and American, chose watercolor to expand their expressive descriptive range in highly detailed landscapes and portraits. Sterling examples in the exhibition are by William Trost Richards, with his lovingly rendered, atmospheric scenes of England, and Hilda Belcher, in a highly polished, casual portrait of a woman in a checkered dress, perhaps a portrait of Georgia O’Keeffe. With the abrupt rise of modernism in the early years of the twentieth century, watercolor served as an expressionist means, but it also served as a way to build glowing shapes important for their own formal properties. Modernist watercolor is a rich vein in the collection, and the exhibition features vital works from this era by John Marin, Oscar Bluemner, Charles Demuth, and Diego Rivera. The exhibition concludes with later watercolors by Nell Blaine, Jim Dine, Jane Freilicher, and Andrew Wyeth.
![Groups on a Beach [Feature image for the exhibit]](../../assets/images/events/catching-light.jpg)
Groups on a Beach, 1934
Charles Demuth (American 1883-1935)
Watercolor over graphite on paper
Gift of Leonard B. and Mary Coxe Schlosser, class of 1951
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