On view

American Art
Wilmerding Pavilion
The Anschutz-Hunt Family Gallery

Lake George,

ca. 1870

John Frederick Kensett, 1816–1872; Cheshire, CT; died New York, NY
y1994-151
During the 1850s, Kensett’s imagery evolved away from the sweeping and dramatic vistas associated with the Hudson River School to embrace a quieter, more contemplative aesthetic that infused his landscapes with a meditative focus. In this sparsely composed canvas, he portrayed the scenic site in New York’s Adirondack Mountains with attention to the reflective properties of light as it glints in the background off the still waters between what is likely Black Mountain, on the left, and Deer Leap, at right, as seen from Sabbath Day Point. The painting’s balanced geometry—with brighter, more distant forms counterposing darker foreground features— affords the image’s darkening atmosphere a counter- vailing tranquility.

More Context

During the 1850s, John Kensett’s imagery evolved away from the sweeping panoramas of the dramatic Hudson River School idiom to embrace, along with a number of its practitioners, the quieter, more contemplative aesthetic of Luminism. Aligned with the philosophical precepts of Transcendentalism and its imperative to integrate spirit and matter, Luminist painters sought to achieve that communion by infusing their work with a precise and meditative focus on the landscape, particularly as manifested through a concentration on the effects of light and atmosphere in the unpeopled, sparsely composed, asymmetrically oriented, horizontal canvases they favored. In all but its somewhat painterly facture — Luminist pictures typically suppress visible brushwork — <em>Lake George</em> embodies the traits of Kensett’s Luminist maturity, portraying the famously scenic site with an attention to the reflective properties of light as it glints in the background off the still waters between what is likely Black Mountain, on the left, and Deer Leap, at right, as seen from Sabbath Day Point.

More About This Object

Information

Title
Lake George
Dates

ca. 1870

Medium
Oil on academy board
Dimensions
36.2 × 61.9 cm (14 1/4 × 24 3/8 in.) frame: 66 × 91.5 × 10.2 cm (26 × 36 × 4 in.)
Credit Line
Bequest of Elaine King in memory of her husband, Col. Herbert G. King, Class of 1922
Object Number
y1994-151
Place Depicted

North America, United States, New York, Lake George

North America, United States, New York, Black Mountain

North America, United States, New York, Deer Leap

North America, United States, New York, Sabbath Day Point

Culture

[Possibly "Kensett Memorial Exhibition and Sale", 1874 [1]]. Acquired by Elaine (Ulman) King (1905-1994) by 1994; bequeathed to the Princeton University Art Museum by Elaine King in memory of her husband Col. Herbert G. King (1899-1973), 1994. [1] According to a letter from 1997 by John K. Howat, the Lawrence A. Fleischman Chairman of the Departments of American Art of the Metropolitan Museum of Art.