Beach at Beverly

c. 1869/1872

John Frederick Kensett

Artist, American, 1816 - 1872

A pink-toned sandy beach meets a placid body of pale blue water under a hazy sky in this horizontal landscape painting. To our left, the beach curves like a letter C to end in the near distance with a terracotta-orange rocky outcropping and a boulder, which comes halfway across the composition. Muted green trees grow atop the outcropping, and the left half is blanketed in moss or grass. A white rowboat has been pulled into the sand about halfway along the beach. One person sits or crouches inside, and a red cloth or net hangs over the side closer to us. A person wearing a straw hat, white, long-sleeved shirt, and brown pants carries a basket over one arm as they walk away from us, not far from the rowboat. The water is very light blue where it laps gently at the shore but is washed by diffuse sunlight to parchment white in the distance. The horizon, which comes a third of the way up the canvas, nearly blends into the milky white bank of clouds above. A few sailboats are near the horizon on the right half of the painting, and a few small patches of blue sky show through the clouds in the upper right corner.

Media Options

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Unlike some of his contemporaries, John Frederick Kensett felt no need to travel to the tropics or the American West to find compelling subjects to paint. Instead, he continually revisited several familiar locales in New York and New England where he could explore the ways in which the same motif was altered by subtle differences in light and atmosphere.

Between 1859 and 1872, Kensett produced over thirty paintings of the North Shore of Massachusetts—then a popular vacation spot for Bostonians. More than twenty works were scenes of Beverly, a coastal town twenty-five miles north of Boston. In each of these works, the dominating compositional element is a large rock formation topped by bushes and small trees at the left. A few figures engaged in various activities usually appear in the foregrounds and the right sides of the scenes are filled by an open area of water.

Beach at Beverly focuses on a rocky projection between Curtis Point and Mingo Beach on the Beverly shore. The artist's choice of an elevated viewpoint serves to lower the horizon and increase the feeling of vast space. An area of dark clouds located over the sand-colored cliff closes the left side of the painting more completely, thus providing a counterpoint to the seemingly infinite sweep of sky and sea at the right. Kensett thus presents a work in which the immediate and the imminent— the figure walking on the beach, the boats sailing on the water, and the clouds approaching from the right —blend with timeless and the permanent—the rocks, water, and sky. It is this delicate balance, depending on a highly sophisticated manipulation of composition, lighting, and paint itself, that gives Beach at Beverly an almost magical intensity and calm repose, ultimately distinguishing it as one of Kensett's most masterful achievements.

More information on this painting can be found in the Gallery publication American Paintings of the Nineteenth Century, Part I, pages 394-397, which is available as a free PDF at https://www.nga.gov/content/dam/ngaweb/research/publications/pdfs/american-paintings-19th-century-part-1.pdf

On View

West Building Main Floor, Gallery 67


Artwork overview

  • Medium

    oil on canvas

  • Credit Line

    Gift of Frederick Sturges, Jr.

  • Dimensions

    overall: 55.8 x 86.4 cm (21 15/16 x 34 in.)
    framed: 85.1 x 115.6 x 8.6 cm (33 1/2 x 45 1/2 x 3 3/8 in.)

  • Accession

    1978.6.5


Artwork history & notes

Provenance

Possibly Jonathan Sturges [1802-1874], New York, and Fairfield, Connecticut;[1] his son, Frederick Sturges [d. 1917], New York, and Fairfield, Connecticut; his son, Frederick Sturges, Jr. [1876-1977], New York, and Fairfield, Connecticut;[2] bequest 1978 to NGA.
[1] According to letter of 18 January 1966 from Frederick Sturges, Jr., and letters of 27 August and 7 December 1981 from Frederick Sturges III (in NGA curatorial files) family tradition held that paintings in the Sturges collection were originally purchased by Jonathan Sturges. In this instance and four others (Kensett, Beacon Rock, Newport Harbor [1953.1.1]; Casilear, View on Lake George [1978.6.1]; and Durand, Forest in the Morning Light and Pastoral Scene [1978.6.2 and 1978.6.3]) no certain evidence establishes ownership by Jonathan Sturges (see The Bashful Cousin [1978.6.4] by Edmonds for more on Jonathan Sturges as a collector). No works by Kensett are mentioned in the discussions of the Jonathan Sturges collection in "Our Private Collections, No. II," The Crayon 3, February 1856: 57 58; Thomas S. Cummings, Historic Annals of the National Academy of Design (1825-1863), Philadelphia, 1865: 141 (reprint, New York, 1965); or Henry T. Tuckerman, Book of the Artists, New York, 1867: 627 (reprint, New York, 1967).
[2] Frederick Sturges, Jr., died 14 October 1977 (letter of 27 January 1982 from Frederick Sturges III, in NGA curatorial files). Beach at Beverly came to the National Gallery as a bequest with four other paintings.

Associated Names

Exhibition History

1980

  • American Light: The Luminist Movement, 1850-1875, National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C., 1980, 86, 115, 212, pl. 2, fig. 2, as Beach at Newport.

1985

  • John Frederick Kensett: An American Master, Worcester Art Museum, Massachusetts; Los Angeles County Museum of Art; The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, 1985-1986, 135, 176, pl. 35, as Beach at Newport.

1987

  • American Paradise: The World of the Hudson River School, The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, 1987, 158-159, as Beach at Newport.

1989

  • Loan for display with permanent collection, The Detroit Institute of Arts, 1989-1990.

2002

  • American Sublime: Landscape Painting in the United States 1820-1880, Tate Britain, London; Museum of American Art of the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, Philadelphia; Minneapolis Institute of Arts, 2002, no. 76, repro. (shown only in London).

Bibliography

1980

  • American Paintings: An Illustrated Catalogue. National Gallery of Art, Washington, 1980: 186, repro.

  • Wilmerding, John. American Masterpieces from the National Gallery of Art. National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C., 1980: 11, 90, 92, no. 27, color repro., as Beach at Newport.

1981

  • Williams, William James. A Heritage of American Paintings from the National Gallery of Art. New York, 1981: 118, 120, repro. 120, as Beach at Newport

1982

  • Lynes, Russell. "Putting Artists in Their Places." Architectural Digest (November 1982): color repro. 64, as Beach at Newport.

  • Garrett, Elayne Genishi. "The British Sources of American Luminism." Ph.D. diss., Case Western Reserve University, 1982: 3, repro. 244, as Beach at Newport.

1985

  • Driscoll, John Paul, and John Howat. John Frederick Kensett: An American Master. Exh. cat. Worcester Art Mus.; Los Angeles County Mus. of Art; Metropolitan Mus. of Art, New York. Worcester and New York, 1985: 135, 176, pl. 35, as Beach at Newport.

1987

  • Radaker, Kevin. "'A Separate Intention of the Eye': Luminist Eternity in Thoreau's 'A Week on the Concord and Merrimack River.'" The Canadian Review of American Studies 18 (1987): 47, repro. 48, as Beach at Newport.

  • Wilmerding, John. American Marine Painting. Rev. ed. of A History of American Marine Painting, 1968. New York, 1987: 53, color repro. 54, as Beach at Newport.

1988

  • Wilmerding, John. American Masterpieces from the National Gallery of Art. Rev. ed. National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C., 1988: 106, no. 30, color repro.

1989

  • Bennewitz, Kathleen Motes. "John F. Kensett at Beverly, Massachusetts." The American Art Journal 21 (1989): 47, 59, 60, repro. 48.

1992

  • American Paintings: An Illustrated Catalogue. National Gallery of Art, Washington, 1992: 218, repro.

1996

  • Kelly, Franklin, with Nicolai Cikovsky, Jr., Deborah Chotner, and John Davis. American Paintings of the Nineteenth Century, Part I. The Collections of the National Gallery of Art Systematic Catalogue. Washington, D.C., 1996: 394-397, color repro.

2004

  • Hand, John Oliver. National Gallery of Art: Master Paintings from the Collection. Washington and New York, 2004: 326-327, no. 264, color repro.

Wikidata ID

Q20188715


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