Cover for Charles Deas and 1840s America book
2009
4.7(4 reviews)
Publisher: University of Oklahoma Press
248 pages
ISBN: 978-0806140308
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Charles Deas and 1840s America

Description

Charles Deas (1818–67), an enigmatic figure on the edge of mainstream artistic circles in mid-nineteenth-century New York, went west to explore new opportunities and subjects in 1840. From his adopted hometown of St. Louis, Deas sent his iconic paintings of fur trappers and Indians back east for exhibition and sale, briefly winning the recognition that had earlier eluded him. This handsome volume—featuring more than 150 illustrations, 70 in color—is the first book exclusively devoted to Deas. In two major essays, Carol Clark presents Deas’s haunting biography and complex art—works that embodied Americans’ uncertainty about the future of their rapidly expanding nation, especially in the contested spaces of the West. Ranging from Indian genre scenes to more violent and bizarre themes drawn from literature and his own imagination, Deas’s images reverberate with the racial tensions and cut-throat economic competition of the period. Three additional essayists examine the historical, political, and social context of Deas’s art and discuss in detail two of his major paintings, Walking the Chalk and Long Jakes, “the Rocky Mountain Man.” The volume also includes Clark’s catalogue of Deas’s paintings, watercolors, and drawings—the most extensive recovery and documentation to date of the work of this important but little-known artist. Charles Deas and 1840s America will constitute the definitive reference on the painter for years to come.

Book Information

Title:Charles Deas and 1840s America
Author:Kate Elliott
Series:Charles M. Russell Center on Art and Photography of the American West Books
Book Number:#4
Published:2009
Pages:248
ISBN-10:806140305
ISBN-13:978-0806140308
Genres:

Series Progress

This book is part of the Charles M. Russell Center on Art and Photography of the American West Books series and is book #4 in the series.