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Sunlight and Shadow: The Newbury Marshes

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Year
  
1871–75

Created
  
1871–1875

Medium
  
oil on canvas

Media
  
Canvas, Paint, Oil paint

Sunlight and Shadow: The Newbury Marshes ngagovauexhibitionturnertomonetImages400165

Dimensions
  
30.5 cm × 67.3 cm (12.0 in × 26.5 in)

Periods
  
Hudson River School, Luminism

Genres
  
Landscape painting, Pastoral

Similar
  
Giant Magnolias on a Blue, Ipswich Marshes, Cattleya Orchid and Three Hu, Approaching Thunder Storm, Magnolias on Gold Velvet Cl

Sunlight and Shadow: The Newbury Marshes (c. 1871-1875) is an oil on canvas landscape by Martin Johnson Heade acquired by the National Gallery of Art in 2010. Heade probably became acquainted with the salt marshes near the mouth of the Merrimack River at Newbury and Newburyport, Massachusetts in 1859 through Bishop Thomas March Clark. Sunlight and Shadow is one of the earliest of Heade's one hundred plus depictions of wetlands.

The National Gallery writes: "[Heade] depicted the tides, meteorological phenomena, and other natural forces that shaped the appearance of the swamp and showed how the land was used for hunting, fishing, and the harvesting of naturally occurring salt hay ... the painting's primary motif, sunlight and shadow, seen, for instance, in its intricate cloud shadows and the subtle movement from light to dark across the body of the haystack, informs and unites all its visual elements."

References

Sunlight and Shadow: The Newbury Marshes Wikipedia


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