|
VENETIAN SCENES by Walter Launt Palmer
December 15, 2007 - June 1, 2008
In the late nineteenth century American artists
were drawn to Venice and the Albany - born artist, Walter Launt Palmer was
no exception. Although his first visit occurred in 1874, it was not until
1881 that Palmer began to paint the city and its environs in earnest.
Concentrating on the landmarks around and near the Piazza San Marco, the
Grand Canal, and San Giorgio he was able to capture the serene quality of
Venice in an evolving Impressionist style that appealed to his American
customers. Palmer painted more than one hundred Venetian subjects that were
especially in demand from the late 1880s to the early 1900s.
During his productive and lucrative sixty-year career, Palmer painted
landscapes of all seasons including his color-filled impressionistic snow
scenes, detailed interior views of Victorian homes, and luminous Venetian
scenes. Palmer was a master of mediums and worked well in oil, watercolor,
pastel and mixed media. Above all, he was a gifted colorist.
This exhibition includes ten Venetian scenes
along with a selection of letters, photographs, diaries and other related
materials drawn from the museum's collection.
The Albany Institute would
like to thank Hawthorne Fine Art, LLC, New York City for funding the
conservation of Interior, San Marco.
Above:
San Marco,
Walter Launt
Palmer (1854-1932), ca. 1895 ,oil on
canvas, ht. 19 ½ in., w. 29 ½ in. signed,
lower left "WALTER L. PALMER"; AIHA Collection, gift of Beatrice Palmer, daughter of the artist,
1942.034.033
|
RELATED EVENT
Sunday, April 6, 2:00pm
GALLERY TALK: Tammis K. Groft, AIHA Deputy Director for Collections &
Exhibitions

Above:
The Garden Steps, Walter Launt Palmer (1854-1932)
1886, oil on canvas, AIHA Collection;1985.13
Major support for this exhibition has been
provided by James and Barbara Hoehn.
MEDIA INQUIRIES
Paul Purdy
Communications & Marketing Associate
Tel: 518.463.4478 x 408
Fax: 518.462.1522
Email:
purdyp@albanyinstitute.org
|