Modern Masters

Kindred SpiritsAsher B. Durand and the American Landscape

Edited by Linda S. Ferber. Contributions by Linda S. Ferber, Barbara Dayer Gallati, Kenneth T. Jackson and Sarah B. Snook

Published by GILES in association with the Brooklyn Museum, New York

Kindred Spirits - Book cover

Kindred Spirits - Double page spread

Publish Date — March 2007 (UK and USA)

Dimensions — 256 pages, 280 x 240mm (9 ½ x 11 in.), portrait

Illustrations — 100 colour and 100 b & w illustrations

Hardback price — UK£30.00/US$55.00

ISBN — 1-904832-26-1

ISBN — 978-1-904832-26-3

Book Details (pdf) — Kindred_Spirits_ai.pdf

Trade Orders — Please visit our Trade Orders section

Sales Points

Publication accompanies the first dedicated exhibition of Durand’s work since 1973

Reproduces works from every aspect of Durand’s long career as an engraver, portrait painter and landscape artist, 100 of which are reproduced in stunning colour plates, including the iconic Kindred Spirits (1849) and The First Harvest in the Wilderness (1855)

Includes an illustrated biographical chronology and an appendix of Durand’s “Letters on Landscape Painting,” published in their entirety for the first time since their original publication in the Crayon in 1855

About the Book

This major new volume revisits for the first time in 30 years the world and the works of Asher B. Durand (1796-1886), one of 19th-century America’s most important artists. Durand was a central figure, both as an artist and as the major spokesman for the American landscape school, and was the acknowledged dean of American landscape painting from his election as president of the National Academy of Design in 1845 until his death at the age of ninety.

Five chapters reconstruct Durand’s career before and after the moment when landscape painting became his passion, so re-establishing the full scope of his achievement. The authors consider landscape production, patronage, markets and criticism during the six decades of Durand’s career. They take us from the earliest efforts of artists to create a national cultural identity by means of American scenery, through the mid-century triumph and, later, the eclipse of what is now called the Hudson River School.

This survey features 100 colour and 100 black and white illustrations, including paintings, engravings and drawings by Durand, as well as numerous photographs and comparative images. This long over-due volume reevaluates Durand's position as a major American landscape artist, his relationship with other artists including Thomas Cole, and his critical role in the American art world of the antebellum period

About the Author(s)

Linda S. Ferber is Vice President and Director, the Museum at The New-York Historical Society. Barbara Dayer Gallati is Curator Emerita of American Art, Brooklyn Museum. Kenneth T. Jackson is director, the Herbert H. Lehman Center for the Study of American History and Jacques Barzun Professor of History and Social Studies, Columbia University.