Exhibition Celebrates Artists’ Love for State Flower
In Bloom: Mountain Laurel and the Lyme Art Colony
May 6 through June 26, 2011
OLD LYME, CT – April 24, 2011: The Florence Griswold Museum in Old Lyme celebrates the state flower as an inspiration for artists with the new exhibition, In Bloom: Mountain Laurel and the Lyme Art Colony. Just like the flower’s short-lived blooms, the exhibition is only on view May 6 through June 26. In the early years of the Lyme Art Colony few motifs generated more interest than mountain laurel (kalmia latifolia). The bushes, which reach their peak in June, grew in such abundance around southeastern Connecticut that the area was described as “one of the finest laurel gardens in the world” by a 1914 newspaper. The plant became a frequent subject among the artists who stayed at Florence Griswold’s boardinghouse. They responded to laurel’s status as a characteristic New England plant and to the sheer beauty of the profuse white and pink blossoms. Laurel paintings for the exhibition were drawn from the Museum’s permanent holdings as well as from select private collections. Visitors to the Museum will also want to tour the grounds and gardens. Over one hundred laurel bushes were reestablished on the property along the bank of the Lieutenant River. Also during this time, the second annual GardenFest takes place June 3-12, featuring special events and activities that highlight the Museum’s natural riches.
An Artist’s 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’s history, this painting serves as the cornerstone of the exhibition. The success of Metcalf’s Kalmia and of another 1905 laurel picture, Childe Hassam’s June, owned by the American Academy of Arts and Letters, sealed the laurel’s status as a central theme for the colony, much like the area’s rocky ledges and Old Lyme’s 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 “more suggestive of the sturdy qualities of our Connecticut men and women, than mountain laurel.” Lyme artists’ 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 the plants embodied the spirit of the state whose landscapes they so loved.
In Bloom is presented with the generous support of the Connecticut Humanities Council and Bouvier ● Champion Insurance. Located on an 11-acre site in the historic village of Old Lyme, the Florence Griswold Museum is known as the Home of American Impressionism. In addition to the restored Florence Griswold House, where the artists of the Lyme Art Colony lived, the Museum features a gallery of changing art exhibitions, education and landscape centers, extensive gardens, and a restored artist’s studio. The Museum is located at 96 Lyme Street, Old Lyme, CT, exit 70 off I-95 and is open year round Tuesday through Saturday from 10am to 5pm and Sunday 1 to 5pm. Admission is $9 for adults, $8 for seniors, $7 students, and free to children 12 and under. For more information, visit www.FlorenceGriswoldMuseum.org or call 860-434-5542 x 111.
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