Friday, August 18, 2023

Trees (horizontal)

Jonas Umbach
Fallen Tree with Herdsmen and Goats
before 1693
etching
Harvard Art Museums

Richard Cooper
Woman seated on Fallen Tree Trunk
ca. 1790-1810
drawing
Victoria & Albert Museum, London

attributed to William Henry Hunt
A Fallen Oak
ca. 1815
drawing, with added watercolor
Yale Center for British Art

Antoine-Xavier-Gabriel de Gazeau, comte de La Bouëre
Uprooted Tree at Olevano Romano
1833
oil on paper
Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York

Pierre-Louis Dubourcq
Fallen Tree overgrown with Weeds
1836
etching
Philadelphia Museum of Art

Thomas Cole
Sketch of Two Dead Trees
before 1848
drawing
Yale University Art Gallery

Martín Rico
Fallen Tree
ca. 1852-58
watercolor on paper
Museo del Prado, Madrid

Carlos de Haes
Study of Felled Tree
ca. 1872
oil on canvas
Museo del Prado, Madrid

Francis Hopkinson Smith
Forest Scene
1874
watercolor on paper
Chrysler Museum of Art, Norfolk, Virginia

Léon Barotte
Tree
ca. 1890
color monotype
Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco
(Achenbach Foundation)

Georges Lacombe
Felled Tree, Normandy
1898
drawing (charcoal and crayon)
National Gallery of Art, Washington DC

Laurie Wilson
Untitled
ca. 1960-80
gelatin silver print
National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne

Aaron Siskind
The Tree
1973
gelatin silver print
Victoria & Albert Museum, London

David Shrigley
Fallen Tree
1996
C-print
Tate Gallery

Robert Shlaer
Blackbirds in Fallen Tree
Cheyenne Bottoms Wildlife Refuge, Kansas

1997
daguerrotype
Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art, Kansas City, Missouri

Jürgen Bey
Tree-Trunk Bench
1999
assemblage with log and wooden chair-backs
Centraal Museum, Utrecht

from The House That Jack Built

the first trees were felled
and sailed in, wrecked, then slept
an age in the northern sun, blackening
to iron                    were found by horsemen
leading their horses and raised as
cloud's axles, rafters of night, a god's gates
      were passed through, seen
from miles off, rolled the sun
and moon along their lintels, rooted,
put out leaves                     for a second time
creaked, tasted the rain, held
the wind to their hearts while
the horsemen streamed like
their horses' manes
into the dark, their fires
black smudge in the subsoil, their bridles
of gold underground

     lived long, grew great
                   were a second time
felled, dressed                    were sharpened to stakes
and raised as a fort
by farmers who'd followed their ploughs
to the treeline for fuel
to bake the pots
their ashes were buried in . . .

– Jacob Polley (2016)