Selections from the Nasher
Museum of Art
Seville in the Sunlight
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Harbor of Seville
Samuel Colman
1865
Oil on canvas
34 1/2 x 54 1/2 inches
Museum purchase, 2002 |
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In this romantic view of the Harbor
of Seville (1865), American landscape painter Samuel Colman
has depicted a calm port scene enveloped by an atmospheric
vapeur de l'air. The haze created by what art historians
call a "view against the light," illumination from
behind by a low sun, at once unifies and romanticizes the
setting. This pictorial technique reflects a seventeenth-century
tradition made famous by the French master Claude Lorraine
and, a generation before Colman, "the painter of light," J.M.W.
Turner.
Colman was one of the earliest American artists to paint
the Spanish landscape. In Harbor of Seville, he chose to
represent prominent architectural monuments on the banks
of the Guadalquivir River.
On the left is the Giralda, a twelfth-century mosque with
a Renaissance bell chamber crowned by a bronze figure of
Christian Faith. Balancing the composition on the right is
the thirteenth-century Moorish Torre del Oro, a twelve-sided
tower with a roof of gleaming gold tiles.
These buildings are monuments to Seville's glorious past
and once-prominent status as a primary port for the Indies
in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. By the nineteenth
century, such historical associations paralleled a growing
American curiosity about the region. At the time of Colman's
arrival, however, Spanish trade centers had shifted from
Seville to other ports such as Cadiz, perhaps lending to
the wistfully reflective mood of the composition.
Colman's interest in Spanish painting was perhaps sparked
by a widespread American attraction to Spain's past. Beginning
in the early 1800s, Americans had become increasingly interested
in the Spanish history of discovery, conquest, and colonization,
which they saw as resembling their own historical legacy.
The discoveries of Christopher Columbus, the paintings of
Goya and Vel·zquez, and the prose of Cervantes, became
popular elements of this nostalgic, cultural fascination.
When Colman traveled to the south of Spain, he sought new
and exotic material for his compositions and found it in
the Moorish towns and provincial settings. He filled numerous
sketchbooks with drawings of sun-baked cliffs, port cityscapes,
and architectural elements. Colman paved the way for other
artists seeking firsthand experience of Spanish culture.
Thomas Eakins and Mary Cassatt were among the many artists
who later followed his lead.
--Shawna Cooper '04
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