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Fitz Hugh Lane

 
Art Encyclopedia: Fitz Hugh Lane

(b Gloucester, MA, 19 Dec 1804; d Gloucester, MA, 14 Aug 1865). American painter and printmaker. He established a strong local reputation among the artists and public of Boston and Gloucester, MA, the harbour town where he was born and spent the majority of his career. Yet Lane's art never enjoyed national standing during his lifetime; not until the term LUMINISM (I)

See the Abbreviations for further details.



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Biography: Fitz Hugh Lane
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Fitz Hugh Lane (1804-1865) was an American marine painter whose works express the transition from the narrative to the highly personal and poetic style associated with luminism.

Fitz Hugh Lane was born in Gloucester, Mass., on Dec. 19, 1804. At the age of 2 he contracted polio, which left his legs paralyzed for life. As a youth, he sketched the Massachusetts coastline around Cape Ann. In the mid-1830s his talents came to the attention of the eminent lithographer William Pendleton, who invited Lane to become an apprentice in his Boston firm.

Pendleton's shop provided Lane with his only formal training in art. Lane produced several lithographed business cards and music-sheet covers. In 1837 he did his first town views, including the National Lancers on the Boston Common. During this time he also saw exhibitions of 17th-century Dutch art at the Boston Athenaeum, as well as the city and harbor views then being painted by the English artist Robert Salmon. These provided a stimulus for Lane's own early paintings.

Lane traveled back and forth between Boston and Gloucester during the late 1830s and early 1840s, then settled permanently in Gloucester in 1848. He did several paintings and lithographs of Gloucester which show a telling sense both for specific details and general effects of light and atmosphere. He was fascinated by the myriad activities along the harbor front and on the water, as revealed in his 1844 View of Gloucester. The painting was subsequently redone as a lithograph.

In the summer of 1848 Lane made his first cruise along the Maine coast. Thereafter, he and various friends returned almost annually to explore the coast of Penobscot and Blue Hill bays and Mount Desert Island. Lane now began to paint quiet, evocative views, and he preferred to depict the transitional hours of the day, such as sunrise and sunset, rather than to fill his pictures with people, as he had done earlier. He applied his paint more thinly and used a glazing technique to create effects of serenity and stillness. Occasionally a contemplative figure appears, to reinforce the sense of man's spiritual harmony with nature.

All of Lane's later work possesses this aura of calm and spaciousness. He painted two pure landscapes near Gloucester in 1863, possibly under Martin Johnson Heade's influence. For the most part, however, Lane's life and art were remarkably self-contained, although his light-filled canvases forecast the direction of American landscape painting in subsequent decades. He remained actively at work up to the time of his death on Aug. 13, 1865.

Further Reading

The primary monograph on Lane is John Wilmerding, Fitz Hugh Lane (1971), which contains a full biographical account, discussion of stylistic development, checklist of works, and bibliography. Also useful is Wilmerding's Fitz Hugh Lane: American Marine Painter (1964).

Irish Literature Companion: Sir Hugh Lane
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Lane, Sir Hugh (1875-1915), founder of the Municipal Gallery of Modern Art, Dublin. Born in Ballybrack, Co. Cork, he was a nephew of Lady Gregory. A successful art dealer, in 1908 he lent a group of Impressionist paintings, chiefly French, to form the nucleus of the Municipal Gallery. When a ‘Bridge of Sighs’ designed by Sir Edward Lutyens to span the Liffey was rejected in 1913 by a City Council that disapproved of the paintings, he removed them to London. An unwitnessed codicil to his will stipulated that they should return to Dublin if a permanent home were allocated to them. The sinking of the Lusitania, in which he drowned in May 1915, led to the paintings being retained in London. The former house of the Earl of Charlemont in Dublin was purchased for the Municipal Gallery in 1929, and the Lane Pictures are regularly displayed there since 1960.

 
Columbia Encyclopedia: Fitz Hugh Lane
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Lane, Fitz Hugh, 1804-65, American painter and printmaker, b. Gloucester, Mass. A painter of ships and coastal panoramas, Lane is most notable as a leading figure in American luminism. He illuminated his canvases with warm, glowing yellow and pink skies reflected in water. The resulting paintings project a shimmering density that expresses a profound serenity that is akin to transcendentalism. Owl's Head, Penobscot Bay, Maine (1862; Mus. of Fine Arts, Boston) is a characteristic work.

Bibliography

See study by J. Wilmerding, ed. (1988).

 
 

 

Copyrights:

Art Encyclopedia. The Concise Grove Dictionary of Art. Copyright © 2002 by Oxford University Press, Inc.. All rights reserved.  Read more
Biography. © 2006 through a partnership of Answers Corporation. All rights reserved.  Read more
Irish Literature Companion. The Concise Oxford Companion to Irish Literature. Copyright © 1996, 2000, 2003 by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved.  Read more
Columbia Encyclopedia. The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright © 2003, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Columbia University Press. All rights reserved. www.cc.columbia.edu/cu/cup/ Read more