BINGHAM, George Caleb - b. 1811 Augusta County, d. 1879 Kansas City - WGA

BINGHAM, George Caleb

(b. 1811 Augusta County, d. 1879 Kansas City)

American painter. He worked mainly in Missouri (where he held several political posts), painting the life of the frontier people. Except for a short period studying at the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts, he was self-taught. His finest canvases, particularly the celebrated Fur Traders Descending the Missouri (Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, 1845), distil visual poetry from the commonplace, but after a trip to study in Düsseldorf in 1856-58 his work lost much of its racy freshness and charm, becoming overlaid with sentimentality.

Fur Traders Descending the Missouri
Fur Traders Descending the Missouri by

Fur Traders Descending the Missouri

Bingham was a specialist in subjects drawn from the American countryside, particularly life on the frontier. In this masterpiece of American genre painting, a unique document of river life in the Midwest, he has depicted a moment in the life of a French-Canadian fur trader, one of the voyageurs who combined commerce with exploration and adopted many ways of the wild. Bingham has raised anecdote to the level of poetic drama by setting up a tension between the suspicious stare of the old trader, the unconcerned reverie of his sprawling half Indian son, and the compact, enigmatic silhouette of a tethered bear cub. Parallel planes recede into the distant background, suggesting that Bingham was familiar with engravings of European paintings, yet the strict formality is softened by an exquisite luminosity.

Feedback