Description
Book SynopsisSpeculative Landscapes offers the first comprehensive account of American artists' financial involvements in and creative responses to the nineteenth-century real estate economy. Examining the dealings of five painters who participated actively in this economyDaniel Huntington, John Quidor, Eastman Johnson, Martin Johnson Heade, and Winslow HomerRoss Barrett argues that the experience of property investment exposed artists to new ways of seeing and representing land, inspiring them to develop innovative figural, landscape, and marine paintings that radically reworked visual conventions. This approach moved beyond just aesthetics, however, and the book traces how artists creatively interrogated the economic, environmental, and cultural dynamics of American real estate capitalism. In doing so, Speculative Landscapes reveals how the provocative experience of land investment spurred painters to produce uniquely insightful critiques of the emerging real estate economy, critiques that uncovered its fiscal perils and social costs and imagined spaces outside the regime of private property.
Trade Review"Barrett illuminates a number of new perspectives from the period which make
Speculative Landscapes…worth reading." * Nineteenth Century Art Worldwide *
"[The book] is exemplary in its purposeful investigations that, in breaking from standard interpretations, enables readers to see and understand multifaceted aspects of works of art with clarity while opening the door to other new inquiries." * Nineteenth Century: The Magazine of the Victorian Society in America *
Table of ContentsContents
Introduction
1. Land, Looking, and Futurity in the Hudson Valley
2. Digging for Gold: Allegories of Speculation on the Illinois Frontier
3. Picturing Land and Labor in the Old Northwest and New England
4. Perilous Prospects: Speculation and Landscape Painting in Florida
5. Painting and Property on Prouts Neck
Conclusion
Acknowledgments
Notes
Selected Bibliography
List of Illustrations
Index