Date: Fri 25-Sep-1998
Date: Fri 25-Sep-1998
Publication: Ant
Author: DONNAM
Quick Words:
Here
Full Text:
Getting From Here To There
w/cuts
YONKERS, N.Y. -- Through their transformation of familiar and natural
landscapes, bridges have served as defining icons and sources of inspiration
for generations of painters, draftsmen and photographers.
"Getting From Here To There," which runs through January 24 at The Hudson
River Museum in Yonkers, N.Y., tells the story of 11 area bridges from their
planning and construction to their interpretation by leading American artists.
Featuring over 75 works, dating from 1940 to the present, this presentation
includes paintings, lithographs, ink, pencil, and charcoal drawings,
watercolors, and prints and photographs of bridges in the New York
metropolitan area. The exhibition is cosponsored by Thalle Construction
Company, Inc, and Yonkers Contracting Co, Inc. The exhibition was organized by
a curatorial team at the museum.
The bridges featured are : Bear Mountain, Bronx-Whitestone, Brooklyn, Corton
Reservoir, George Washington, Henry Hudson, Hell Gate, High Birdge,
Poughkeepsie Railroad, Queensboro, and Tappan Zee. Among the artists who
recorded and interpreted these bridges are Bernice Abbott, Elsie Driggs,
Childe Hassam, Ernest Lawson, Charles Sheeler, and Edward Steichen. The
depiction and interpretation of bridges by artists are central to the
exhibit's theme and organization.
As a new motif, a formal device, a commentary on modern life, a celebration of
new technology, or a romanticized longing for the past, American artists have
been drawn to these structures since the mid-Nineteenth Century when High
Bridge was built to carry the fresh waters of the Croton Aqueduct into New
York City.
The show explores bridges through the trends of American Impressionism in
Childe Hasaam's poetic "Brooklyn Bridge in Winter" and Reynold Beal's colorful
"Poughkeepsie Railroad." Other versions of bridges include Elsie Driggs'
precisionist oil "Queensboro Bridge" and both Yvonne Jacquette's and Richard
Haas' contemporary visions of the Brooklyn Bridge. Photographer Berenice
Abbott captured the changing face of New York in the 1930s with her critically
acclaimed bridge photographs, such as "Queensboro Bridge II (from Long Island
City)," and "Hell Gate Bridge I (from Astoria)." Also included are numerous
photographs from local resources including the Westchester County Archives,
the Westchester County Historical Society, the Historical Society of
Tarrytown, and the MTA Bridges and Tunnels Archive.
"Getting From Here To There" includes historical documents and ephemera
ranging from construction plans and photographs, the original posts and rails
from the pedestrian walkway over the Poughkeepsie Railroad Bridge, color
postcard sets, and period tourist maps. Other components include video
presentations on the George Washington and Poughkeepsie Railroad bridges as
well as five interactive stations where children and families can build their
own bridges based on different engineering and architectural principles.
As a complement to the exhibition, the museum is featuring 40 original
illustrations by Lynd Ward from the beloved children's story, The Little Red
Lighthouse and the Great Gray Bridge, written by Hildegarde H. Swift. This
exhibition, "The Little Red Lighthouse and the Great Gray Bridge, " is open
through January 24.
