Nov 182025
 

Jasper Frances Cropsey, “Autumn in the Ramapo Valley, Erie Railway”,1873, Oil on canvas

Jasper Francis Cropsey, “Autumn in the Ramapo Valley, Erie Railway”,1873 (closer)

Andrew Wyeth “Fall at Archies”, 1937, Egg tempera on panel

Andrew Wyeth “Fall at Archies”, 1937,(detail)

Jasper Francis Cropsey, “Autumn on the Brandywine”, 1887, Oil on canvas

Autumn is a perfect time to see the latest exhibition Cropsey, Wyeth, and the American Landscape Tradition at the Brandywine Museum of Art. The exhibition offers the first opportunity to view the large painting Autumn in the Ramapo Valley, Erie Railway by Jasper Francis Cropsey in a museum, as well as to see several additional works by artists including the always wonderful Andrew Wyeth.

From the museum about the exhibition-

A stunning example of Gilded Age patronage, Autumn in the Ramapo Valley, Erie Railway of 1873, has been in private British collections since it was commissioned the same year by Irish-American railroad magnate James McHenry. This major canvas changes our understanding of Jasper Francis Cropsey, one of the iconic talents of American art. Almost seven feet in length, Autumn in the Ramapo Valley, Erie Railway is both a celebration of the American landscape and American industry. The train passing through the valley is a reference to the Erie Railroad, in which McHenry had recently acquired a majority stake. Just after it was completed, McHenry had the painting shipped to England where it remained until purchased in 2025 by the The J. Jeffrey and Ann Marie Fox Foundation for American Art. Seen by the public for the first time since 1873, the painting will be at the heart of a special exhibition, Cropsey, Wyeth, and the American Landscape Tradition, which draws on the rich and varied holdings of the Brandywine Museum of Art and the Wyeth Foundation for American Art to provide a focused appraisal of the complex art of American landscape painting.

Alongside this exceptional large-format Cropsey, additional works by Cropsey, Alfred Thompson Bricher, Albert Bierstadt, William Trost Richards, John Frederick Kensett, Mary Blood Mellen, Martin Johnson Heade, and more survey the nineteenth-century boom in landscape painting in the United States and the relationship to industry that was a key context at the heart of this movement. The exhibition continues the story with Cropsey’s afterlives. Through key works in the Brandywine and Wyeth Foundation collections, a clear line of descent traces the further development of American landscape art, via Homer, Bellows, and N.C. Wyeth to an especially rich flowering in the works of Andrew Wyeth (1917–2009). Documentation in the Wyeth family library and archives shows a depth of engagement with artists of the Hudson River School not previously recognized, including specific lessons in composition, allegory, and the aesthetic potential of industry that Andrew Wyeth learned from paintings like Autumn in the Ramapo Valley. With a variety of works in watercolor and tempera, some of which have never been exhibited before, the story of the rich American landscape tradition continues and intriguing commonalities between the artists of the Hudson River School and Wyeth emerge.

Some additional information about Cropsey from the museum-

Cropsey was one of the leading lights of American art in the third quarter of the nineteenth century: a period in which new fortunes from natural resources and transportation were being spent on ambitious landscape paintings depicting the very regions that were the sources of their wealth. Cropsey’s rivals included the likes of Frederic Edwin Church and Albert Bierstadt. All three worked regularly for railroad barons, and all three achieved notable success, while the so-called “landscape boom” lasted, that allowed them to build statement mansions in New York’s countryside.

It was at Cropsey’s country home, “Aladdin,” in Warwick, New York that he made this painting for the transatlantic businessman James McHenry. Irish-born, Philadelphia-raised, Liverpool-launched, and London-based by this time, McHenry was a European supplier for, and investor in, American railroads. By this date, he had taken control of the Erie Railway and, in celebration, commissioned a depiction from Cropsey of its passage through the scenery of the Ramapo Valley near the northeastern border of New Jersey with New York. Cropsey had already gained a national reputation for paintings that blend industrial and natural subjects in this way, most famously in his 1865 painting Starrucca Viaduct, Pennsylvania (Toledo Museum of Art) depicting a major engineering feat of the same railroad McHenry now controlled, so he was a fitting choice for this commission.

While many American landscape artists were traveling and painting internationally in the period, interest in their work generally came from American audiences. Cropsey was an exception: he worked in London for seven years and exhibited thirteen paintings at the Royal Academy of Art’s competitive annual exhibitions, was presented to Queen Victoria, and sold numerous works to British buyers. The return of Autumn in the Ramapo Valley, Erie Railway to the United States is a landmark moment for scholars and art lovers alike that helps in telling a fuller story of the global networks that surround historical American art.

This exhibition closes 5/31/26.

Sep 032025
 

Alegria del Prado (artists Esther del Prado from Spain and Octavio Alegria from Mexico) created this mural in Sacramento before their 2017 exhibition at the 1810 Gallery.

Oct 312024
 

The painting above is Norman Rockwell’s The Fiddler, 1921, currently on view at Brandywine Museum of Art in Pennsylvania.

From the museum about the work-

Best known for the paintings he did as cover illustrations for The Saturday Evening Post, Rockwell also did extensive work for other major publications. “The Fiddler” appeared as a cover for The Country Gentleman in October 1921, still relatively early in his career. Rockwell celebrates autumn and Halloween, represented by both the grinning jack-o-lantern and the corn cob and autumn leaf garland. He skillfully mimics the effect of stage lighting in this painting, highlighting the musician’s expression and hands, creating an illusion of three-dimensionality.

Dec 162022
 

For more work by Bryan Snyder, check out his website. It has a large amount of information about the artist and his history.

During his time in Carlsbad, he has done a lot of work to create an artistic community- including founding both the Carlsbad Crawl, a website which focuses on art happenings around town; and the Carlsbad Art Wall, which rotates new art murals every two months, alternating between visiting artists and local artists.

Finally check out his Instagram for up to date content- today he posted a video segment his students made on his as a skateboarding teacher.

Sep 242013
 

The Kinks- Autumn Almanac

I love this song and it always ends up on my playlists when Autumn returns, even when I’m living in places where you only know what season it is by the displays put up in stores. It’s so English as well, reminding me of good times spent with “football on a Saturday, roast beef on Sunday”.