William Trost Richards 1833-1905
Seascape, 1899
Oil on canvas laid down on panel
19 1/2 x 32 inches (49.5 x 81.3 cm)
Signed and dated lower left: Wm T. Richards. 99
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William Trost Richards began his artistic practice in the early 1850s and took the American landscape as his principle subject. Similar to his artistic peers, he traveled to the Adirondacks...
William Trost Richards began his artistic practice in the early 1850s and took the American landscape as his principle subject. Similar to his artistic peers, he traveled to the Adirondacks in search of a transcendent landscape vision. During these trips, informed by the tenets of the Hudson River School, Richards joined the host of American artists who were seeking to define an image of the national landscape.1 Richards was also, at this time, deeply influenced by the theories of the English aesthetician John Ruskin, who held that is was the artist’s duty to strive for absolute truth to nature, insofar that traces of the artist’s hand would be virtually effaced from the work of art.
When Richards turned to painting seascapes in the late 1860s, the works he executed combined his keen interest in the poetic drama of nature with an unfailing attention to detail. His careful observations of the water, coastline, and myriad effects of light worked beautifully in tandem with the limitless space and atmosphere of the seashore. The “delight” Richards said he felt “in the beauty of air and sea” is almost palpable in his paintings.2 Accordingly, his panoramic vistas of the ocean earned him great renown as one of the finest and most successful American marine painters.
In Seascape Richards creates the perfect Ruskinian balance between a loving transcription of nature and an evocation of the sensations it inspires. The painting’s panoramic shape offers the viewer a view to behold nature’s wonder, a virtual window onto the water. Richards masterfully records with skill and precision the variety of effects of atmosphere and light. The exuberant play between sunlight and clouds, reflections on the water, and movement of the waves captures the wonder of nature that so fascinated and inspired the artist.
1 Linda S. Ferber and Caroline M. Welsh, In Search of a National Landscape.
2 William Trost Richards quoted in Linda S. Ferber, William Trost Richards: American Landscape and Marine Painter, 1833–1905, exh. cat. (1973), p. 31.
When Richards turned to painting seascapes in the late 1860s, the works he executed combined his keen interest in the poetic drama of nature with an unfailing attention to detail. His careful observations of the water, coastline, and myriad effects of light worked beautifully in tandem with the limitless space and atmosphere of the seashore. The “delight” Richards said he felt “in the beauty of air and sea” is almost palpable in his paintings.2 Accordingly, his panoramic vistas of the ocean earned him great renown as one of the finest and most successful American marine painters.
In Seascape Richards creates the perfect Ruskinian balance between a loving transcription of nature and an evocation of the sensations it inspires. The painting’s panoramic shape offers the viewer a view to behold nature’s wonder, a virtual window onto the water. Richards masterfully records with skill and precision the variety of effects of atmosphere and light. The exuberant play between sunlight and clouds, reflections on the water, and movement of the waves captures the wonder of nature that so fascinated and inspired the artist.
1 Linda S. Ferber and Caroline M. Welsh, In Search of a National Landscape.
2 William Trost Richards quoted in Linda S. Ferber, William Trost Richards: American Landscape and Marine Painter, 1833–1905, exh. cat. (1973), p. 31.
Provenance
Private collection, Maine;Private collection, Great Neck, New York, until 2026
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