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Modernisms 1900-1980
Course: Modernisms 1900-1980 > Unit 8
Lesson 1: American ImpressionismCuban cigars, Cuban independence
See learning resources here.
Willard Metcalf, Havana Harbor, 1902, oil on canvas, 46.5 x 66.4 cm (Terra Foundation for American Art, Daniel J. Terra Collection, 1992.49), a Seeing America video Speakers: Dr. Katherine Bourguignon, Curator, Terra Foundation for American Art, and Dr. Steven Zucker. Created by Beth Harris, Smarthistory, and Steven Zucker.
Willard Metcalf, Havana Harbor, 1902, oil on canvas, 46.5 x 66.4 cm (Terra Foundation for American Art, Daniel J. Terra Collection, 1992.49), a Seeing America video Speakers: Dr. Katherine Bourguignon, Curator, Terra Foundation for American Art, and Dr. Steven Zucker. Created by Beth Harris, Smarthistory, and Steven Zucker.
Video transcript
(gentle music) - [Steven] We're in the
Art Institute of Chicago. We're looking at a painting
that is actually part of the Terra Foundation for
American Arts collection. It was painted by Willard Metcalf in 1902, and it's called Havana
Harbor, and it's beautiful. It's a place I want to go. - [Katherine] And you've
hit on the exact thing that Metcalf is trying to convey. We're looking at something exotic and peaceful and beautiful. He wants to engage the viewer and make us think that this
is where we want to go. - [Steven] We're overlooking
the Port of Havana, but a port that is surrounded
by this lush vegetation. You can feel the warmth of the sun and the cool breeze that blows through. - [Katherine] Metcalf is using
some of what he has learned from Impressionism by trying
to convey the brushiness of these different plants, but he is also carefully portraying for us what he is seeing when he's in Havana, so those are palm trees. This is a little bit
exotic, but of course, a beautiful sunny day. Everything is calm and peaceful. - [Steven] And those
rich colors were intended to be vivid reminder of the tropics for a very different context. This is a painting that
was intended to be seen in New York City. - [Katherine] Willard
Metcalf is commissioned by Stanford White, an
architect friend of his. Stanford White is hired
to design the interior of Havana Tobacco Company
Store in New York City. So Willard Metcalf is
commissioned to go to Cuba for a few weeks in early 1902
and make these paintings. - [Steven] This store interior
is not to be underestimated. It was described as one of
the most luxurious stores ever created. It had beautiful white
columns, paintings, palms. It was meant to recreate a
luxurious vision of the tropics. - [Katherine] Stanford White
knew what he was doing. He uses mostly white marble
with these columns and the floor but then puts real potted
palms into the store, has Willard Metcalf work on these really brightly colored paintings. The idea is that buying
a cigar in this store is like as if you could go to Havana through this one act of
entering into the store. - [Steven] But it's
important not to forget the historical context in which
this painting was produced. It was made in 1902 in Havana. 1902 was the year that
the island was turned over from the United States to Cuba itself. It was first moment in centuries that the island had been independent. - [Katherine] It's true that
there is troubled history here, and Metcalf is not indicating that at all, but we cannot forget that 1902 date, because just four years earlier, it's the US military that
takes over control of Cuba from the Spanish government, and it's only a few months
after Metcalf's visit that the Cubans governed
themselves independently. - [Steven] Although, importantly,
with American oversight. The United States was not
willing to cede total control. As we look at this
beautiful, lush painting, with its Impressionist brushwork that so softly renders
this tropical paradise, it's so easy to forget that in the years before this painting was made, Cuba had suffered terribly
under the Spanish. An enormous percentage of
the island's rural population had been placed into what were essentially concentration camps, and hundreds of thousands
of people perished. - [Katherine] And even under US rule, the island is not without
diseases, economic difficulties. We're not getting that in Metcalf's image. And of course, anyone
wanting to buy a cigar in New York City would not
want to be reminded of that. But here's Metcalf giving
us a view overlooking something really peaceful, but he still is distanced and up above perhaps a kind of patriarchal overlooking, without getting into any of
the seamier sides of the city. - [Steven] And so this is
really interesting conflict, because we have an image
that is incredibly beautiful, that is visually luscious, and yet it's also erasing
a very complicated history. - [Katherine] And it's
hard to know exactly how much the people going into the Havana Tobacco
Company Store in New York would know about all that history. What they were interested in
is purchasing very high-end, hand-rolled tobacco from Cuba, but today, looking at the exact moment
when Metcalf is there, we need to be understanding
of that whole context. - [Steven] The composition is
so skillful in this painting. My eye enters into the lower right. It's caught by that brilliant red. It slowly proceeds in and
around the trunks of the palms and then down to the buildings below. - [Katherine] The red roofs
of these quaint buildings, even though some of them
are larger structures, catches our eye because of that exotic red flowering
bush in the foreground. We have palms. We have ferns. It's actually a carefully
constructed composition with foreground, middle
ground, background, the curve of the harbor echoing
those soft curving hills. Even the palm trees seem
to be moving in the wind. Everything is designed to catch our eye and help us to move around the painting. So Metcalf is skillful
at creating a composition that looks almost casual but is in fact carefully constructed. - [Steven] And I love the
way that he is able to imply that tropical breeze. Not only do we see its
effect on the tall palms, but if you look for instance at the colors of the smaller palm in the foreground, you can see the dark tops of the leaves, and then it seems almost as if the fronds have actually been blown over so we can see the lighter undersides. - [Katherine] That little puff of smoke coming out of a chimney seems to be pushing in the breeze. There's a sailboat in the far distance. Everything is designed to help you think you are in fact there, and you can feel also
the warmth of the sun and the soft breeze of this exotic city. (gentle music)