VMFAU1_130209_644
Existing comment: American Art -- Colonial & Revolutionary Eras:
Situated in one of the nation's original thirteen colonies, VMFA's American art collection traces more than three hundred years of cultural exchange and development. From the time of North America's first permanent English colony -- in Jamestown, Virginia -- enterprising portrait painters, artisans, and consumers participated in a dynamic material culture that played a significant role in shaping family and social life. Closely following fashions in Europe (particularly England, France, Germany, and Holland), talented craftsmen from the South, Mid-Atlantic, and New England applied established techniques and styles to native materials, merging tradition and invention.
Portraiture, a genre informed by patterns of population growth and widespread assumptions about class and gender, flourished alongside individual residents of Charleston, Williamsburg, Philadelphia, New York and Boston -- British America's leading cultural centers -- affirmed their social status in the emerging nation. Emulating European aristocracy, colonial patrons also encouraged painters to explore so-called Grand Manner themes of heroism and nobility in an emerging neoclassical inspired by Greco-Roman art.
Modify description