Monday, September 18, 2023

Trees (decorative)

Silver Studio (London)
Frieze with Trees against a Sunset
1902
machine-printed wallpaper
Victoria & Albert Museum, London

Johann Walter-Kurau
Study of Trees
1932
oil on board
Princeton University Art Museum

Ivan Albright
Tree Study, Unfinished - Georgia
ca. 1960-70
watercolor and gouache
Art Institute of Chicago

Gustave Baumann
Two Trees
ca. 1924
tempera on paper
Cleveland Museum of Art, Ohio

Rosa Bonheur
Tree Study
before 1899
watercolor
Cleveland Museum of Art, Ohio

Gillian Carnegie
Black Square
2004
photo-etching and aquatint
Tate Gallery

George Clausen
Tree
1905
watercolor
(study for The Ploughman's Breakfast)
National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne

Karl Dankwart
Tree with Broken Branch
ca. 1675
gouache on prepared paper
Gemäldegalerie, Dresden

Edward Duncan
Study of a Pollarded Tree
before 1882
watercolor
Yale Center for British Art

Carl Gaertner
Tree Study
1948
watercolor
Cleveland Museum of Art, Ohio

Jeannette Klute
Frosted Tree
ca. 1950-60
dye transfer print
Chrysler Museum of Art, Norfolk, Virginia

Pedro de Lemos
The Cliff Dweller
ca. 1915-20
color woodblock print
Minneapolis Institute of Art

Eliot Porter
Sycamore Tree, Michigan
1973
dye transfer print
Princeton University Art Museum

George Richmond
Study of a Tree
ca. 1848
watercolor
Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York

Jacobien de Rooij
The Tree, The Wall
1989
drawing (colored chalks)
Centraal Museum, Utrecht

Ito Shinsui
Pine Tree at Karasaki
1918
color woodblock print
Art Institute of Chicago

from Japanese Characters

To look into a word as through a window
and address the thing itself: a simple wish,
and one calling me to a simpler time –
yet when can that have been? Life before English?
Conversant in the automatic doors
of an alphabet we barely need to press
for meaning sprung wide-open, now it seems
that to sound things out again and memorize
new, ramifying claims upon the eyes
is, piece by piece, to reconstruct a cosmos
I'd grown to think long set and spoken-for.
Just as all life appears to have begun
the moment we were born, around the sun
of native language orbit vaguer bodies,
lagging with distance, unbreathable atmosphere:
seen as through clouds, a Venus thickly wrapped
in idioms colorful and yet inapt,
on Saturn a ring too loose for us to wear.

– Mary Jo Salter (1983)