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Art of the Americas to World War I
Course: Art of the Americas to World War I > Unit 6
Lesson 2: Early Republic- John Trumbull, The Declaration of Independence
- Jean-Antoine Houdon, George Washington
- Jean-Antoine Houdon, George Washington
- Gilbert Stuart, The Skater
- Gilbert Stuart's Lansdowne Portrait
- Thomas Jefferson, Monticello
- Jefferson, Monticello
- Thomas Jefferson, Rotunda, University of Virginia
- An African muslim among the founding fathers, Charles Willson Peale’s Yarrow Mamout
- Charles Willson Peale, The Artist in His Museum
- Peale, Staircase Group (Portrait of Raphaelle Peale and Titian Ramsay Peale)
- John Vanderlyn, Ariadne Asleep on the Island of Naxos
- "We have met the enemy and they are ours."
- Clean water for a young Philadelphia
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Clean water for a young Philadelphia
The painting "Fairmount Water Works" by Thomas Birch showcases Philadelphia's early 19th-century achievement in harnessing nature for the city's growth. The Waterworks, a marvel of modern engineering, provided clean water and symbolized the city's progress. This picturesque depiction of Philadelphia was globally recognized, influencing future American landscape traditions. Created by Beth Harris and Steven Zucker.
Video transcript
(piano music) - [Steven] We're at the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, looking at a canvas by Thomas Birch titled Fairmount Water Works. - [Anna] The Fairmount Water Works was the number one tourist
destination in the United States until it was supplanted by
Niagara Falls in the 1840s. - [Steven] But Niagara Falls is dramatic. It's sublime and it's enormous. This is beautiful, it's picturesque. It's quiet, it's calm. - [Anna] This scene, unlike Niagara Falls, shows what Americans could do with nature. And they are harnessing nature and they're using it to create a modern, salubrious, healthy,
beautiful, civilized city, the city of Philadelphia. - [Steven] This is man
gently making nature useful, and this was one of the highest ideals of the early 19th century. - [Anna] Many Americans
were connected with rivers, trade, and canal building. George Washington, for example, was invested in building
canals outside Washington, D.C. Likewise, Philadelphians
were involved in building the Schuylkill River canal so
that boats like this steamboat could make it all the way up past what was previously the
Schuylkill River Falls, and make the Schuylkill River navigable. Of course, now we think
of it as a beautiful place for rowing, but it didn't
become that picturesque river until it was damned and the Fairmount Water
Works was developed. - [Steven] Philadelphia was a young, vibrant growing city. But in the 18th century,
it was a city that depended on wells for its drinking water. And by the end of the 18th century, there wasn't enough water to fight fires, and in 1793, there was an
outbreak of yellow fever. - [Anna] Which they believed
was caused by unclean water. We know now that yellow fever is actually caused by mosquitoes. So, this group called
the Watering Committee develops in the city of Philadelphia and they build the first
pump house at Center Square. It works for about 12 years or so and the Watering Committee becomes aware that they need to build a
more up-to-date structure to get clean water for everybody in the city of Philadelphia. And that's when Graff works to develop the new Fairmount Water Works, which is at a location a
little north from the city along the Schuylkill River, right by what is now the
beginning of Fairmount Park. - [Steven] And this will
ultimately provide the city with clean water for
nearly a hundred years. - [Anna] The Waterworks was known as one of the modern wonders of the world. People from all over the world came to visit the Waterworks. - [Steven] And look at
the architectural style that Graff chooses, it's neoclassicism. He's referring to this ideal architecture of the ancient world, which was associated with
a kind of moral wellbeing, with a kind of moral elevation. And so, even the physical
manifestation of the Waterworks was meant to be inspiring. - [Anna] In this period,
Philadelphia was known as the Athens of America, and the people who lived in Philadelphia pursued that connection with their use of neoclassical
architectural forms. In the foreground, you see
the most modern industry, the steam engine propelling
this steam ship forward. It's about to go into the locks and this modern engineering
marvel of the canal is going to take this great modern boat up and then go along its picturesque journey along the winding Schuylkill River. - [Steven] The Waterworks were ingenious. The idea was to take water
that was flowing downstream, divert it into the Waterworks,
which would do two things. It would provide water for a reservoir, that's not seen in this painting, that would've been just
at the top of the rocks at the extreme right,
at the present location of the Philadelphia Museum of Art. But it was also powered by that water. Huge water wheels provided the energy to push that water uphill,
which could then be gravity fed to the city below. And so this painting
really is a celebration of man's ability to harness the power and the beauty of nature. - [Anna] Before New York
becomes the Empire State, after the completion of another canal, the Erie Canal in 1825, which links the Atlantic, Hudson, and
the Great Lakes region, Philadelphia is really the centerpiece of the new Republic of the United States. Many people don't realize that
this image of the Schuylkill traveled all over the world and that Birch's painting was
used as a model for prints, which were then distributed
around the world and collected. And then those prints were
used for hand-painted porcelain made in China in the 1820s, as well as transferware
made in Great Britain in the 1820s and '30s. And it is this image of
America that people first see when they think of the
early Republican U.S. We tend to think of
the Hudson River School being the first landscape
tradition in the United States. But this image of this more picturesque domesticated landscape,
this Philadelphia landscape, was the first international
view of the United States. And Thomas Cole, who is the father of the Hudson River School, when he saw this painting
on view at PAFA in 1824, said that he felt his heart sink as he felt his deficiencies in art. So to have the father of
the Hudson River School say that his heart sank when
he looked at this painting, I think is a pretty great testament to the skills of Thomas Birch. (piano music)