Selections from DUMA
MORNING LIGHT
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At the South Head, Grand Manan
Alfred Thompson Bricher (American,
1837-1908)
OIl on 38 x 28 1/2 inches |
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A seascape by Alfred Thompson Bricher, a
painter best known for his luminous, hyper-realistic subjects of
the rocky New England shoreline, has been acquired for the Duke
University Museum of Art's American collections. Born in Portsmouth,
New Hampshire, Bricher grew up in Newburyport, Massachusetts, and
Boston. After opening a studio in 1858, he began to make sketching
excursions along the Massachusetts and Long Island coasts, to Mount
Desert Island, Maine, in the White Mountains of New Hampshire,
and in the Catskills and Hudson River Valley in New York.
At the South Head, Grand Manan features a dramatic view of the
steep, coastal rock formations on this island situated between
New Brunswick, Canada, and northern Maine. The vertical format
and crashing waves seen here are less common among Bricher's works,
which often depict calm, glassy seas gently lapping a beach. Almost
two-thirds of the painting's composition is occupied by a sky filled
with light-struck clouds, illuminated by a brilliant sunrise hidden
behind the rocky promontory on the left. White seabirds fly over
the waves in the foreground, a mist rises against the cliffs, and
two sailboats can be seen in the middle and far distance.
With its atmospheric and vaporous effects, DUMA's new painting
offers one of Bricher's most unusual compositions. The purchase
of the painting was made possible through a gift from the John
A. Schwarz III and Anita Eerdmans Schwarz Family Endowment Fund.
Schwarz '56 is a Duke trustee.
www.duke.edu/web/duma
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