The Half Dome - View from Moran Point (The South Dome - Yosemite Valley)
Creator(s):
Thomas Moran (Formerly attributed to)
Culture:
American
Date:
1887
Period:
Hudson River School
Materials/Techniques:
brown printing ink on paper
Paper/Support:
Portrait; single-sided
0.251- 0.262 mm
Cream, machine-made Japan paper. Smooth, soft surface with low degree of sizing. Slightly mottled surface with clumped fibers in transmitted light
"Thomas Moran, landscape painter, etcher, engraver, lithographer. Born February 12, 1837, at Bolton Lancashire (England) accompanied his family to Maryland in 1844, and studied painting with his brother Edward in Philadelphia during the mid-1850. In 1862 the two Moran’s' went to England for further study and came under the influence of Turner. Thomas visited Europe again in the same decade and several times in the later years. His fame rests largely on his large paintings of scenes in the Far West, including Yellowstone Park, Yosemite, and the Grand Canyon of the Colorado. His home was in Philadelphia until 1872 when he moved to Newark (N.J.) and shortly after to NYC. In 1916 he moved to Santa Barbara (Cal.) where he died on August 26, 1926."
An interestingly analogous relationship exists between Gilcrease Museum and the National Park Service. Both resulted from the efforts of farsighted visionaries. Both assumed the responsibility for bringing together and protecting the wonders of the world for future generations: on the part of the parks, the wonders of nature; on the part of the museum, artistic evocations of the sublime spirit of place, and a host of other artworks and artifacts that embody the wonders of humanity's expressive abilities. Both have come a long way since their earliest beginnings. In 2016 the National Park Service is responsible for protecting and managing more than four hundred sites, including cherished jewels such as Yellowstone and Yosemite, but also less known but historically important places like the Washita Battlefield National Heritage Site in western Oklahoma. Currently, Gilcrease Museum continues to preserve and share masterworks by EuroAmerican and Native artists, personal memorabilia and rare historic documents, and much more. In 2016, the citizens of Tulsa voted to set aside the necessary funding to allow the museum to expand by some 100,000 square feet, enabling it to use its collection to better educate, enlighten, and inspire than ever before. With this browse we celebrate the National Park Service and Gilcrease Museum, and their essential roles as stewards of the sublime.
Moran, Thomas. The Half Dome - View from Moran Point (The South Dome - Yosemite Valley). 14.654. 1887. Tulsa: Gilcrease Museum, https://dci-collections.gilcrease.org/object/14654 (08/15/2017).
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