Painting of the Day, December 16, 2011
- Part 3 of Illustrators of The Oregon Trail
By Donna Poulton
"I've heard people complain of the monotony, the weariness, the oppressiveness of the plains. For me the great plains have a releasing effect. They make me want to run and shout at the top of my voice. I like their endlessness. I like the way they make human beings appear as the little bugs they really are. I like the way they make thought seem futile and ideas but the silly vapors of the physically disordered. To think out on the great plains, under the immense rolling skies and before the equally immense roll of the earth, becomes a presumptuous absurdity." — Thomas Hart Benton
Perhaps the most important Regionalist painter of the 1930s, Thomas Hart Benton’s stylized works are as easily recognized as his subjects. He depicted themes that were uniquely American: farmers, floods, miners, politics and the heroic figures of the west. Benton’s contributions to the centennial edition of Parkman’s Oregon Trail were ideally suited to the narrative he enjoyed illustrating.
Cover illustration by Thomas Hart Benton. Credit: graydogsbooks
Frontispiece by Thomas Hart Benton. Credit: etsy.com
Sunflower and Buffalo by Thomas Hart Benton. Credit: monet.unk.edu
For more information on Illustrators of The Oregon Trail and Thomas Hart Benton you might be interested in these posts:
Impressions of the West: Thomas Hart Benton
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