The Juniata, Evening

1864

Thomas Moran

Artist, American, born England, 1837 - 1926

Far below us, a river winds through a valley lined with hazy mountains in this horizontal landscape painting. In the distance, the line of mountains emerges from the left, near the top of the canvas, and marches down toward the center, growing lighter and mistier in the distance. Streaks of olive-green growth drape down their sides, and pale sunlight from the upper right warms their craggy faces, which are painted in tones of peach, tan, taupe, and parchment white with pewter-gray fissures. The mountains move across the canvas and angle way from us, to our right. There, they are overlapped, just off center, by a tree-covered slope that emerges from the right. At its foot is a steel-gray river that winds from the lower right toward the center of the composition. The land sweeps down from the left side, spreading out into meadows that meet the river. They are carpeted in moss green with streaks and patches of rust-brown earth and scattered with clusters of trees painted in tones of celery, olive, and pine green. Closest to us and near the lower left corner of the painting, is a man, tiny in scale, on a flat bluff. He wears a white coat and trousers, and sits hunched on a stool facing our left. He looks toward a grove of trees with pea-green leaves and ginger-brown trunks that tower over him, along the left edge of the composition. He has turned away from a painting on an easel that stands just beyond him, and an open wooden box that sits on the ground behind him. A closed, seafoam-green parasol also lies nearby. Just beyond the lip of the bluff and down in the valley are creamy white dots that suggest livestock. Farther back, near the foot of the mountains, a cluster of buildings sit near the tree line in the meadow. Wispy white clouds drift through the light azure-blue sky. The artist signed and dated the painting in the lower left corner, “THOS.MORAN.1864 OP.8.”

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In the spring of 1871 Thomas Moran traveled to the American West for the first time. Immediately upon his return, he began producing the paintings that would change the course of his career. A gifted colorist, Moran was the first artist whose technical expertise matched the wonders of Yellowstone. In 1872 Congress purchased Moran's enormous canvas Grand Canyon of the Yellowstone and installed it in the Capitol. Soon Moran began signing his paintings with a creatively configured monogram incorporating three letters (TYM), reflecting his new fame as Thomas "Yellowstone" Moran.

Moran's paintings of Yellowstone and later of the Grand Canyon and the Southwest were so revelatory in terms of wondrous geologic formations and astonishing color that they soon overshadowed all his previous work. Only recently have the remarkable eastern landscapes that Moran created before he journeyed west garnered the attention they deserve. The Juniata, Evening is one of the most beautiful and important of these works.

Born in Bolton, England, raised in Philadelphia, Moran returned to his homeland in 1862 to study works by the artist he revered above all others—J.M.W. Turner. For several months he retraced Turner's path through England and France sketching the landscapes that had inspired the English master. Steeped in the writings of John Ruskin, Turner's early champion, Moran returned to Philadelphia and began producing a series of stunningly beautiful landscapes of the Pennsylvania countryside. Taking to heart Turner's example and Ruskin's advice (study nature carefully and reproduce her wonders accurately), Moran spent weeks sketching in the forests surrounding Philadelphia.

In the summer of 1864 he ventured farther, traveling to central Pennsylvania where the Juniata River, a major tributary of the Susquehanna, flows through lush meadows and steep sandstone cliffs. Moran's painting of the valley is filled with closely observed detail: grazing sheep, farm dwellings, distant smoke, a lone traveler, and most remarkably, a foreground vignette of an artist (possibly a self-portrait) with a painting on his easel duplicating the scene before the viewer.

Completed in September 1864, The Juniata, Evening was purchased—perhaps commissioned—by George Frederick Tyler, a Philadelphia banker and railroad executive. Moran signed and dated the painting in the lower left corner, placing the notation "Op 8" beneath his name. One year earlier he had begun numbering his studio paintings and recording key information about them on an "Opus List." Several pages of Moran's list survive including his notation for "Opus 8" The Juniata, Evening. Thus the completion date and first owner of the painting are known as well as the original purchase price: $200.

On View

West Building Main Floor, Gallery 64


Artwork overview


Artwork history & notes

Provenance

Purchased, and possibly commissioned, 1864 by George Frederick Tyler, Philadelphia.[1] Spears collection.[2] (Henry Schultheis Co., New York); (sale, Parke-Bernet Galleries, New York, 24 February 1938, no. 35, as Western Landscape); P. Kachurn.[3] private collection, from the 1960s; acquired by Mrs. Kachurian; gift to her son, Leon Kachurian; acquired September 1998 by (Gerald Peters Gallery, Santa Fe);[4] sold 1998 to Vern Milligan [d. 2012], Denver; purchased 26 October 2010 by NGA.
[1] This is recorded by the artist in his "Opus List" (4026.4048, Archive, Gilcrease Museum, Tusla), in which the painting is number 8. "O.P.8" is inscribed on the canvas below the signature. See Nancy K. Anderson, Thomas Moran, exh. cat. National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C.; Gilcrease Museum, Tulsa; Seattle Art Museum, New Haven and London, 1997: 189, 350, 352.
[2] This collection is named in the 1938 sale catalogue.
[3] The consignor's and buyer's names related to the 1938 auction were kindly provided by Sotheby's department of American art (personal communication, 22 July 2013, recorded in NGA curatorial files). It is possible that "Kachurn" was a misspelling of "Kachurian" and that the painting remained in the Kachurian family from the 1938 sale until the 1998 sale to the Peters Gallery. A label from Bernard Danenberg Galleries, New York (now in NGA curatorial files), with the title Landscape with Self-Portrait, was on the painting's frame, but it has not yet been determined when this dealer had possession.
[4] Information about ownership of the painting by the Kachurians was kindly provided by the Gerald Peters Gallery (e-mails of 11 July 2013, in NGA curatorial files).

Associated Names

Exhibition History

2017

  • East of the Mississippi: Nineteenth-Century American Landscape Photography, National Gallery of Art, Washington; New Orleans Museum of Art, 2017-2018, no. 80, repro.

Inscriptions

lower left: THOS.MORAN.1864 / OP.8.

Wikidata ID

Q20188649


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