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Sun, Wind, and Rain: The Art of David Cox
16 OCTOBER, 2008 — 4 JANUARY, 2009
This autumn the Yale Center for British Art will be the first and only U.S. venue for a major retrospective of David Cox (1783-1859). Marking the 150th anniversary of the artist's death, Sun, Wind, and Rain: The Art of David Cox examines the work of this important figure in the development of British landscape and watercolor painting.
The first significant exhibition devoted to his work since 1983, it includes more than one hundred of his watercolors and drawings and approximately a dozen oil paintings. The works are drawn from the Center's collection, as well as from public and private collections in Great Britain and the United States. Sun, Wind, and Rain: The Art of David Cox has been co-organized with Birmingham Museums & Art Gallery, England, where it will be on view in early 2009.
The exhibition takes its title from one of Cox's best-known watercolors, painted in 1845. Showing a farmer and his wife riding through stormy open ry as a distant train crosses the horizon, Sun, Wind, and Rain (Birmingham Museums & Art Gallery) is emblematic of the concerns with the representation of light and atmosphere and weather that lie at the heart of his landscape art. Throughout a long and productive career, Cox made a specialty of capturing the effects of wind and weather in the English and Welsh ryside. The bold and vigorous style of his later years prefigures Impressionism.
According to Scott Wilcox, a leading authority on the artist and the curator of the exhibition, Cox has long been appreciated for his mastery of the medium of watercolor, but his breadth of interests, intellectual depth, and art-historical awareness have been consistently undervalued. The quality of his landscape painting in oils has yet to be fully recognized. This exhibition will enable the public to gauge the full extent of Cox's achievement and restore the artist to his position as one of the great landscape painters of the Romantic era.
ABOUT THE ARTIST
Born in Birmingham, Cox began as a watercolor painter in London in 1804, the founding year of the Society of Painters in Water Colours, of which he would later become a member and regular exhibitor. Through the 1830s his watercolors reflected many of the dominant trends in British landscape and watercolor painting during the Romantic era. In the later 1830s he took up oil painting, and in 1841 he returned to Birmingham to pursue his work in the new medium. He by no means abandoned watercolor painting, and in these same years his watercolors gained a remarkable boldness, gravity, and freedom of technique that set them apart from current fashion. In the last decades of his life he stood out as one of watercolors most original and distinctive practitioners.
CREDITS Sun, Wind, and Rain: The Art of David Cox has been co-organized by the Yale Center for British Art and Birmingham Museums & Art Gallery, U.K. The exhibition curators are Scott Wilcox, Curator of Prints and Drawings, Yale Center for British Art, and Victoria Osborne, Curator of Art (Prints and Drawings), Birmingham Museums & Art Gallery.
CATALOGUE
A fully illustrated catalogue, published by the Yale Center for British Art, Birmingham Museums & Art Gallery, and Yale University Press, will accompany the exhibition. The book has been edited and written by Scott Wilcox, with essays by Victoria Osborne, Peter Bower, Charles Nugent, Greg Smith, and Stephen Wildman. This will be the first book in English on the artist since the catalogue of the major David Cox exhibition at Birmingham Museums & Art Gallery and the Victoria and Albert Museum in 1983-84. The volume will be the most significant publication on David Cox since Nathaniel Neal Solly's Memoir of the Life of David Cox appeared in 1873. It will be available for sale in the Museum Shop.
TOUR Following its showing at the Yale Center for British Art, the exhibition will travel to the Birmingham Museums & Gallery, where it will be on view January 31 - May 3, 2009.
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