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Browse: Thomas Moran: Beyond the West

Thomas Moran (1837­–1926) became best known for his images of the American West, but there is more to his artistic career. Between accompanying Ferdinand V. Hayden’s geological survey of the Yellowstone region in 1871 and traveling with John Wesley Powell to the Grand Canyon of Arizona in 1873, Moran made a brief trip to Maine.[1] The artist went to Rangeley Lakes, and although he enjoyed trout fishing, his focus was securing patrons. No commissions were forthcoming, but four years later Moran created several illustrations for Scribner’s Monthly based upon drawings he made on that trip. Also, sandwiched between his initial western excursions and the trip to Maine, Moran produced several illustrations of the Pictured Rocks of Lake Superior for The Aldine. He based these wood engravings upon sketches he made a decade earlier, when he visited the Great Lakes.[2] This was to be the artist’s pattern for decades—extensive travel interspersed with periods of productive studio work.

Moran took sketching trips throughout the United States. In addition to the American West, Maine, and the Great Lakes, he traveled to Florida, Niagara Falls, and the Virginias to fulfill commissions for magazines and travel guides. Trips to Mexico yielded numerous sketches, from which he later made etchings and paintings. The artist was enchanted by the Mexican port of Veracruz because it reminded him of Venice, although he had never been to the European city of canals. When Moran first visited Mexico in 1883, he only knew Venice through the work of British artist J. M. W. Turner (1775–1851), whose paintings and prints he had long admired. When he finally visited Venice himself a few years later, in 1886, the region became a particular favorite. Not only did Moran find the city, with its shimmering canals and stately architecture, a joy to sketch, but he worked those drawings up into etchings and paintings that sold well in the United States.[3]

Moran was always on the lookout for new vistas to portray, and if the resulting works were popular—and therefore profitable—so much the better. He also seemed to delight in his adventures, as suggested by his letters to his wife and fellow artist, Mary Nimmo Moran (1842–1899).[4] Once back home, as previously noted, Moran used his drawings as the inspiration for finished works, sometimes years later. His preliminary sketches became the source of works in a range of mediums, including wood engravings, lithographs, etchings, watercolors, and oil paintings. The drawings also provided inspiration for subjects we might call “fantasies.” His artistic imagination allowed Moran to travel “beyond the West” in paintings such as his Seascape (see below) of 1924 or his Hiawatha and the Serpents (see below) from 1875. These fanciful works rely on Moran’s knowledge and experience of the known world, which he had carefully recorded in his sketchbooks. By combining a cave or a canyon sketched from an actual location with imagery of serpents or shipwrecks summoned up from his imagination, Moran created a fantasy that was grounded in reality.

Click on any of the images below to learn more about the wide variety of locales beyond the West, real and imagined, portrayed by Moran in a variety of mediums. He did sometimes travel with his wife, and for more information on his depictions of locations they visited together, see Thomas Moran and Mary Nimmo Moran: Partners in Art.

—Sandra Pauly, Henry Luce Foundation Curatorial Scholar for Moran Collection Research, 2021

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[1] Anderson et al., Thomas Moran, 197, 207.

[2] Anderson et al., Thomas Moran, 205; and Friese, “The Painter as Printmaker with Descriptions of Thomas Moran’s Techniques,” 48–49. Moran was more directly engaged in the production of illustrative work than other artists, which allowed him more control of the finished product. An artist usually gave his drawings to a publisher, and a copyist transferred the drawings to a boxwood block, which was then carved by the engraver. Moran had worked as a copyist when he was an apprentice at Scattergood and Telfer in 1853; because he was skilled at drawing on the wood block, he continued the practice when he received commissions for periodicals.

[3] Strengths of the Moran holdings at Gilcrease include the extensive collection of Moran’s field sketches as well as the finished works based upon them. Of particular interest are his images of Mexico and Venice, since there are a number of drawings and preliminary washes to compare with the finished paintings. Moreover, he created several etchings of Mexico and Venice based upon his oil paintings. Translating the vivid colors of an oil painting into the black-and-white imagery of an etching is a challenging task, and one at which Moran excelled.

[4] Moran’s letters to his wife can be found in Bassford and Fryxell, Home-thoughts from afar.

Eddy on Rangeley Stream

An avid angler, Thomas Moran visited Maine’s Rangeley Lakes in 1873, creating this ink wash and several other sketches to record his visit.1 As was sometimes the case, it was only later that he could capitalize on his field work when he secured a commission to illustrate the article “Trout-Fishing in the Rangeley Lakes” for the February 1877 issue of Scribner’s Monthly.2 The Rangeley Lakes were popular with anglers in the northeastern United States, particularly those who enjoyed fly-fishing.3 In fly-fishing, according to the article, the best results were obtained when the artificial fly was cast “in the eddy,” the whirlpool that formed in swiftly flowing waterways, such as that depicted in Moran’s Eddy on Rangeley Stream.4

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Pictured Rocks of Lake Superior

In 1860 Thomas Moran took his first sketching trip outside his home base in Philadelphia, to Michigan’s Lake Superior. Moran may have been drawn to the area because of the popularity of Henry Wadsworth Longfellow’s The Song of Hiawatha, first published in 1855.1 Pictured Rocks was the setting for the poem’s fictive account of the Ojibway leader Hiawatha’s life, including his marriage to Minnehaha of the Dacotah, a union that brought peace to the two warring tribes.2

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Hiawatha and the Serpents

And Nokomis, the old woman,
Pointing with her finger westward,
Spake these words to Hiawatha:
“Yonder dwells the great Pearl-Feather,
Megissogwon, the Magician,
Manito of Wealth and Wampum,
Guarded by his fiery serpents,
Guarded by the black pitch-water.
You can see his fiery serpents,
The Kenabeek, the great serpents,
Coiling, playing in the water;
You can see the black pitch-water
Stretching far away beyond them,
To the purple clouds of sunset!”1

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A Picnic

A woman in a long hoopskirt dress stands by two figures reclining on a blanket set with food and utensils. All the elements of a picnic are present in this drawing by Thomas Moran. A leafy tree to the left and a stout tree trunk on the right frame the scene, with a larger, lush tree dominating the middle ground. Additional figures walk on a path leading down from the picnic site to a waterway; perhaps they will join the people on the hillside for the feast, or perhaps they are a separate party. On the waterway, we can see a boat near a dock. As our gaze continues back, we notice a bridge in the middle ground and what appears to be a town clinging to the hillside in the distance. The artist has included a plethora of details in this charming scene, all on a piece of paper a little over nine inches in diameter!

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The Niagara River from Brock Monument

In the sketch The Niagara River from Brock Monument, our focus is on the river, waterfall, and clouds because Thomas Moran has used white gouache to highlight those features.1 His application of gouache varies—heavier in the river, lighter in the cascade—so the water is like a solid ribbon that vaporizes into mist. For the sky, a thick application of sparkling white creates the towering tops of the clouds as they build over the darker wash used for the gathering storm, reinforcing the idea of the powerful, transformative forces at work below in the falls.

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In Luray Cave

Not all of Thomas Moran’s field sketches were created aboveground, as seen here. For In Luray Cave, the artist used a few lines to suggest a path leading us into the cave, where a well-dressed woman stands near one of the towering stalagmites. As our eyes are drawn upward by the soaring columns, we discover that some of the lines that define them appear to extend beyond the page, suggesting the cavern’s dizzying heights.

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Sunday Morning, Maravatío

When Thomas Moran visited Mexico in 1883, he was captivated by the municipality of Maravatío,1 a refreshing oasis of green that lies in an arid plain between the capital of Mexico City and the silver mines of San Luis Potosí. Depicted in this watercolor sketch is the parish church of San Juan Bautista, its magnificent campanario (bell tower) recognizable for miles around. San Juan Bautista was built during the eighteenth century, the great era of parish church construction in Mexico, when lavish architectural embellishments were common, most notably on the entryway.2

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The Peak of Orizaba from Esperanza

“We reached Esperanza at two o’clock. This point is some 12000 feet above Vera Cruz and here we had a fine view of the snow covered peak rising about 5000 feet above us against an intensely blue sky. It was a grand sight.”1 —Thomas Moran in a letter to Mary Nimmo Moran, 1883

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Cortés Tower, Mexico

Above a steep, rocky gorge topped with lush, green vegetation stands the gleaming tower of the Palace of Cortés. Located in Cuernavaca, Mexico, and constructed in the 1530s, the palace and its tower are among the oldest structures built by Europeans in the Americas.1 Thomas Moran depicted the edifice in radiant white highlighted with soft tans, touches of lavender, and even a blush of pink. The artist used a similar pastel palette in the light-suffused sky above the tower to counter the inky blue storm clouds gathering over the canyon. Moran based the painting on sketches completed during a trip he took through Mexico in 1883.2

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Print D: The Castle of San Juan de Ulúa, Veracruz, Mexico

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Venice: Reminiscence of Veracruz, Mexico

“Here I am in Venice and in good condition. I arrived here on Saturday night. . . . Since my arrival I have done nothing but wander about the streets & I have done no work as yet. Venice is all, & more, than travellers have reported of it.”1 —Thomas Moran in a letter to Mary Nimmo Moran, 1886

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Moonlight Fete in Venice

Completed during either his 1886 or 1890 sojourn to Venice, this pen and ink study was executed so quickly and effortlessly that in some sections the artist’s pen never left the paper. There is one continuous stroke of the pen for the architecture, another for the gondolas, leaving additional marks to be made only for the sky and water. Although many of the field sketches Thomas Moran created in Venice are quick line drawings, they formed the basis for over sixty-five oil paintings depicting the city of canals, rivaling his portrayal of any other subject in oils, including the American West.1

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Specters from the North

In April 1890, Thomas Moran sailed aboard a White Star liner from New York City to Europe accompanied by his wife, Mary Nimmo Moran (1842–1899). When the ship was several days out at sea, reports circulated among the passengers that an iceberg was adrift nearby.1 Moran spent hours on deck in freezing temperatures sketching the glacial behemoth, complete with notations on longitude and latitude.2 These quickly executed drawings impart Moran’s excitement as he encountered an iceberg firsthand. Later, the artist would channel the thrill of that moment into this oil painting, Specters from the North.3 Even though it was more than two decades before the RMS Titanic would sink after hitting an iceberg, Moran clearly appreciated the danger the bergs presented, as evidenced by the wreckage he portrayed in the painting’s foreground. This bit of battered wood was also a reference to Frederic Edwin Church’s The Icebergs (1861, Dallas Museum of Art, 1979.28) and although not obvious, the title of Moran’s work creates an additional connection to Church’s painting.

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Seascape

Although best known for his depictions of the American West, Thomas Moran produced several seascapes, including this one, created two years before his death. Silhouetted against the horizon, a ship tilts back and to its side, suggestive of one last, perilous journey for the artist as the art world was leaving Moran’s naturalistic renderings behind. By the turn of the century in the United States, many artists, critics, and collectors had accepted Impressionism as a legitimate means of visual expression—although Moran had not. When Georges Braque (1882–1963) and Pablo Picasso (1881–1973) exhibited their early experiments in Cubism at New York City’s 1913 Armory Show, the work was met with disdain by many, although some were intrigued. Others would come round as more and more avant-garde art movements emerged. By the early twentieth century, Moran’s style was becoming passé, and some in the art world now viewed his work with derision.1 Moran, however, defiantly carried on in a style and visual vocabulary established in the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries.

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This Chic Evening Gown is of White Satin and Golden Net - Metamorphosis

At first glance, viewers might not be sure what the subject of this image is, or its medium. Is this an old photograph of a snow-covered mountain and a stream or is it a glacier? Perhaps a faded print of a valley with mist-enshrouded hills in the distance? The title only adds to our confusion. Why would Thomas Moran, noted for his landscapes, give this work a title that refers to an item of clothing? Yet there is a clue in the last word: metamorphosis. Are we looking at the transformation of an article of clothing into a landscape? Now we are on the right track, and the medium—white gouache, pencil, and newsprint—tells the rest of the story.1

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