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book: Painting Texas History to 1900
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Painting Texas History to 1900

  • Sam DeShong Ratcliffe
Language: English
Published/Copyright: 1992
View more publications by University of Texas Press
American Studies Series
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About this book

Certificate of Commendation, American Association for State and Local History, 1994
T. R. Fehrenbach Book Award, Texas Historical Commission, 1992
San Antonio Conservation Society Citation, 1993

Dramatic historical events have frequently provided subject matter for artists, particularly in pre-twentieth-century Texas, where works portraying historical, often legendary, events and individuals predominated. Until now, however, these paintings of Texas history have never received the kind of study given to historical, fictional, and film versions of the same events. Painting Texas History to 1900 fills this gap with an interdisciplinary approach that explores these paintings both as works of art and as historical documents.

The author examines the works of more than forty artists, including Henry McArdle, Theodore Gentilz, Robert Onderdonk, William Huddle, Frederic Remington, Friedrich Richard Petri, Arthur T. Lee, Seth Eastman, Sarah Hardinge, Frank Reaugh, W. G. M. Samuel, Carl G. von Iwonski, and Julius Stockfleth. He places each work within its historical and cultural context to show why such subject matter was chosen, why it was depicted in a particular way, and why such a depiction gained popular acceptance. For example, paintings of heroic events of the Texas Revolution were especially popular in the years following the Civil War, when, in Ratcliffe's view, Texans needed such images to assuage the loss of the war and the humiliation of Reconstruction.

Though the paintings cut across traditional art history categories—from the pictographs of early historic Indians to European-inspired oil paintings—they are bound together by their artists' intent for them to function as historically evocative documents. With their visual narratives of events that characterized all of America's westward expansion—Indian encounters, military battles, farming, ranching, surveying, and the closing of the frontier—these works add an important chapter to the story of the American West.

Author / Editor information

Sam DeShong Ratcliffe is head of special collections at the Hamon Arts Library of Southern Methodist University. He holds a Ph.D. in American Civilization from the University of Texas at Austin.

Reviews

Texas history has long been celebrated by historians, fiction writers, and film makers, but this handsome volume represents the first detailed examination of the state's history in paintings.... A useful contribution to historians' understanding of how artworks have functioned to create, reflect, and reinforce Americans' visions of this specific part of America's multiple Wests.
— Western Historical Quarterly


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Publishing information
Pages and Images/Illustrations in book
eBook published on:
December 15, 2014
eBook ISBN:
9781477304723
Pages and Images/Illustrations in book
Main content:
190
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