Your Friend, Frederic E. Church

Selected Letters from the Exhibition

Frederic E. Church to Erastus Dow Palmer, September 10, 1884

Introduction

This online exhibition presents digital scans and transcriptions of selected letters featured in Your Friend, Frederic E. Church. We invite you to explore the correspondence and get to know the artists and their families through their own words. The letters reveal friendships, artistic ambitions, personal losses, and everyday life in nineteenth-century America. Throughout the physical exhibition galleries, QR codes reproduced next to each letter provide direct access to the full scans and transcriptions available online. Use the arrows to advance to the next letter. Letters are organized in chronological order.

2026 marks the 200th anniversary of the birth of Hudson River School painter Frederic E. Church (1826–1900). To celebrate the artist’s legacy, the Albany Institute of History & Art presents Your Friend, Frederic E. Church, an exhibition that focuses on the friendship between Church and Albany-based sculptor Erastus Dow Palmer (1817–1904). Palmer was among the leading portrait sculptors of the second half of the nineteenth century. Friends for half a century, Church and Palmer (and their wives) wrote to each other about their art, their children, and their respective farms, and visited each other frequently.

Among the 72 letters from Church to “My dear Palmer” in the Albany Institute’s collection is one dated July 7, 1869, where he writes the now famous words “About an hour this side of Albany is the center of the World – I own it.” This reference was to Olana, the 250-acre living landscape, home, and estate near Hudson, New York, created by Church and his family, which stands today as one of the most well-preserved artistic environments in the United States.

Church owned ten works by Palmer—more than by any other artist. He lived with them at Olana and in his New York City studio. The letters show that the artists encouraged each other and reported to one another about their successes and failures. On January 1, 1863, Palmer wrote to Church about a sculpture he carved in reaction to the Civil War: “I never made sorrow before as it is expressed in this head. It is not grief but sorrow & compassion.” In this letter he mentions the title of the work, Peace in Bondage, for the first time. The sculpture, in the Albany Institute’s collection, and the letter, in Olana’s collection, will be united for the first time in this exhibition.

In addition to examples from Church and Palmer’s correspondence, the exhibition includes sculpture, drawings, paintings, and manuscripts drawn from the Albany Institute’s collection, paired with significant public and private loans. Among these are twelve objects borrowed from the collection of Olana State Historic Site that further illustrate the deep friendship between the Church and Palmer families, as well as a memorial painting, The Evening Star, painted by Church for Palmer in 1858 after the death of two-year-old Frederick Church Palmer, on loan from a private collection in Chicago.

The exhibition also features work by Church and Palmer's mutual friends, including Albany-born composer George William Warren (1828–1902), who dedicated music to both Church and Palmer, including his 1863 piece, Marche di Bravura: Homage to Church’s Picture Heart of the Andes. The exhibition also features art and archival materials that highlight Church’s relationship with Thomas Cole (1801–1848) and the entire Cole family, including a newly conserved print of Church’s masterpiece Heart of the Andes inscribed “To Mrs. Thomas Cole with the kind regards of Frederic E. Church” from the Albany Institute’s collection. The exhibition also explores the relationship Church had with Erastus Dow Palmer’s son Walter Launt Palmer (1854–1932) who studied with Church and briefly shared a New York City studio with him.

To celebrate Church’s enduring impact on American art, museums across the country are presenting exhibitions and programs related to the artist’s life and work. Among the dozens of planned commemorations, Your Friend, Frederic E. Church uniquely focuses on a remarkable body of personal correspondence preserved in the Albany Institute’s collection. By bringing these materials into dialogue with works of art and key loans, the exhibition offers insight into the relationships that shaped one of America’s most important artists.

Frederic E. Church to Erastus Dow Palmer

September 10, 1884

Olana Sep. 10th 1884

My dear Palmer
I set out to make
you a humble apology
for not replying sooner to your
kind letter of August—
But remembering your
often shortcomings in that
direction I will content
myself with the simple
assertion that my conscience
has given me some pricks
on your account—
In fact we have had our
house full all the time—
But now—the two youngest

[page 2]
boys are off to school—
Fred has just gone to Princeton
College—and the last of
our friends left yesterday—
So, taking advantage of the
unusual quiet, I write you
this long apologetic preamble
which will not interest you
a bit—
We have often talked of
you and the immense
pleasure it must give you
and Mrs. Palmer to have
nearly all your family under
your roof once more—If I
had had my aforetime strength
I would have driven down
to Appledale some fine day

[page 3]
from Albany and seen for
myself the gathered clans—
The weather has been so pleasant
too for country life—some day
you will tell us all about it—
Accepting your offer I
selected one of the photographs
you sent us for inspection, of
course I chose the Patriarch
looking from the Window—
I return the other two—and
assure you that if the other
half of the new bridge is as
fine as the portion visible in
the photograph—then the bridge
is nearly all you represented
it to be—
I hope that Mrs. Palmer as
Housekeeper did not wilt

[page 4]
under the duties so large
a family necessarily made
imperative—
I am much better
of late—Mrs. Church feels
a good deal tired with the
care of all the children and
fitting them out for school
and is glad to rest awhile—
We will probably take a
trip to New Orleans just before
winter and linger in the
South until the boys
Holidays, then come north
and open the House for their
reception and after their
return make directly for
Mexico—
We expect in a few days to go

[page 5]
to the Mountain House for a
short visit—and perhaps to
Clarendon Springs in October—
You must let me know how
you all are and what the
movements of the various branches
of your family—I have heard
nothing about Walter for a
long time—
I am writing in haste—why—
I don't know, for I have plenty
of time
With our best love to
you all
Your friend
F.E. Church

[Erastus Dow Palmer Papers, AQ 185, B1, F19]

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