In Bloom: Mountain Laurel and the Lyme Art Colony
An Artist鈥檚 Delight
During his first visit to Old Lyme in 1905, Willard Metcalf made the laurel growing on the banks of the Lieutenant River the subject of a major work, Kalmia, that received acclaim when it was exhibited in Old Lyme, and later in New York and at the Carnegie International in Pittsburgh. In 2009, with the help of a generous consortium of donors, the Museum purchased Kalmia. Viewed today as one of the most important paintings acquired in the Museum鈥檚 history, this painting serves as the cornerstone of the exhibition. The success of Metcalf鈥檚 Kalmia and of another 1905 laurel picture, Childe Hassam鈥檚 June, owned by the American Academy of Arts and Letters, sealed the laurel鈥檚 status as a central theme for the colony, much like the area鈥檚 rocky ledges and Old Lyme鈥檚 historic Congregational Church. Frank Bicknell even chose to immortalize the plant in the panel he painted in 1910 for the Griswold House dining room. In addition to Metcalf and Hassam, painters such as Matilda Browne, Roger Curel-Sylvestre, William Chadwick, Harry Hoffman, William S. Robinson, Edward Rook, and Caro Weir Ely are among the colony artists who depicted laurel, carrying the practice on for the next two decades.
The State Flower
On April 17, 1907, the Connecticut General Assembly passed a bill naming mountain laurel the official state flower. A representative of the Daughters of the American Revolution asked whether there could be any flower 鈥渕ore suggestive of the sturdy qualities of our Connecticut men and women, than mountain laurel.鈥 Lyme artists鈥 enthusiasm for the motif coincided with this move to acknowledge the flower as an emblem of Connecticut. Their continuing engagement with the theme of laurel well into the 1920s reflects their feeling that it embodied the spirit of the state whose landscapes they so loved.
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An Artist鈥檚 Delight
During his first visit to Old Lyme in 1905, Willard Metcalf made the laurel growing on the banks of the Lieutenant River the subject of a major work, Kalmia, that received acclaim when it was exhibited in Old Lyme, and later in New York and at the Carnegie International in Pittsburgh. In 2009, with the help of a generous consortium of donors, the Museum purchased Kalmia. Viewed today as one of the most important paintings acquired in the Museum鈥檚 history, this painting serves as the cornerstone of the exhibition. The success of Metcalf鈥檚 Kalmia and of another 1905 laurel picture, Childe Hassam鈥檚 June, owned by the American Academy of Arts and Letters, sealed the laurel鈥檚 status as a central theme for the colony, much like the area鈥檚 rocky ledges and Old Lyme鈥檚 historic Congregational Church. Frank Bicknell even chose to immortalize the plant in the panel he painted in 1910 for the Griswold House dining room. In addition to Metcalf and Hassam, painters such as Matilda Browne, Roger Curel-Sylvestre, William Chadwick, Harry Hoffman, William S. Robinson, Edward Rook, and Caro Weir Ely are among the colony artists who depicted laurel, carrying the practice on for the next two decades.
The State Flower
On April 17, 1907, the Connecticut General Assembly passed a bill naming mountain laurel the official state flower. A representative of the Daughters of the American Revolution asked whether there could be any flower 鈥渕ore suggestive of the sturdy qualities of our Connecticut men and women, than mountain laurel.鈥 Lyme artists鈥 enthusiasm for the motif coincided with this move to acknowledge the flower as an emblem of Connecticut. Their continuing engagement with the theme of laurel well into the 1920s reflects their feeling that it embodied the spirit of the state whose landscapes they so loved.
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