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Browse: Thomas Moran: Before the West, an Artist in Training

In 1853, the Philadelphia wood-engraving firm of Scattergood and Telfer hired sixteen-year-old Thomas Moran (1837–1926) as an apprentice. Philadelphia was a major publishing center in the United States during the nineteenth century, home of the popular periodical The Saturday Evening Post and the well-known book publisher J. B. Lippincott. Wood engraving was then the primary technique used to create illustrations for publications. Although a wood-engraving firm would assign an apprentice duties such as preparing the wood for the copyists and engravers, David Scattergood quickly recognized Moran’s drawing skills and put him to work sketching images on the blocks for the engravers to carve.[1]

Wood engraving uses the small end of the piece of wood rather than the broad, flat surface. As was customary, Moran copied the compositions of other artists onto the blocks, but the drawings provided by the artists were not always the same size as the end of the block. Thus, the apprenticeship provided Moran with practical lessons in the technical aspects of artistic production, such as perspective and scale, since he had to maintain the integrity of an original drawing on a smaller surface. Although Moran may not have been creating his own compositions, the apprenticeship helped refine his drawing skills through constant copying and introduced him to the commercial possibilities of printmaking.[2]

After working all day at Scattergood and Telfer, Moran continued to hone his drawing skills by gaslight in the evening, and to create watercolors during his free daylight hours. According to the Moran family, Thomas traded his watercolors for art books, obtaining the British artist J. M. W. Turner’s Harbours of England and The Rivers of France, as well as several sets of his Liber Studiorum (Book of Studies) from the Philadelphia bookseller C. J. Price & Company. These books were collections of prints by Turner that gave artists an opportunity to study and copy his work so they could learn about the various types of landscapes, such as historic, mythological, mountain or forest, and seascapes.[3] As Moran’s interest in landscape imagery increased, he wanted more time to sketch outdoors and to paint. The limitations imposed on him by his apprenticeship with Scattergood and Telfer led him to leave the firm in 1856.

At this point he shared a studio in Philadelphia with one of his older brothers, the artist Edward Moran (1829–1901). Both brothers benefited from the guidance of the artist James Hamilton (1819–1878), who maintained a studio nearby.[4] Originally from Great Britain, Hamilton established his career in the United States and was an admirer of the work of Turner. In fact, U.S. art critics referred to Hamilton as the American Turner, a sobriquet that in time they applied to Moran. It was perhaps Hamilton who encouraged the Moran brothers to visit Great Britain to see Turner’s work firsthand. In 1861, Thomas and Edward traveled to England for that purpose and to sketch the sites portrayed by Turner in his work.[5] Turner, however, also traveled throughout Europe during his career, and depicted areas other than the British Isles. In 1866, Moran returned to Europe to visit not only England but also France and Italy,[6] and the drawings he created of the palaces of England and the architectural monuments of Italy informed his conception of the American West in the years to come.

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

Click on any of the images below to learn more about Moran’s early artistic efforts and the various influences on his development as an artist. To learn more about the next phase of Moran’s career, see Thomas Moran: The West and the Business of Art.

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[1] Hansen, “Thomas Moran and Nineteenth-Century Printmaking,” 14.

[2] Hansen, “Thomas Moran and Nineteenth-Century Printmaking,” 14.

[3] Wilkins, Thomas Moran Artist of the Mountains, 18–19.

[4] Wilkins, Thomas Moran Artist of the Mountains, 20–21.

[5] Morand, Thomas Moran: The Field Sketches, 13, 18–23.

[6] Morand, Thomas Moran: The Field Sketches, 29–35.

 

 

 

Bridge over the Schuylkill, Philadelphia

Bridge over the Schuylkill, Philadelphia displays the young Thomas Moran’s budding talent with a challenging medium, watercolor. Using a limited palette of browns, blues, and greens, Moran deftly portrays an African American man fishing in the calm waters of the Schuylkill River, with the bridge and the Neoclassical architecture of Fairmount Water Works providing the backdrop. Moran made two distinctive choices in creating this image, both potentially emblematic of an appeal to civic pride.

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Fairmount Water Works, Philadelphia

From his family’s home in Philadelphia, the young Thomas Moran easily found scenes to challenge his artistic talents, as seen in watercolors such as Bridge over the Schuylkill, Philadelphia (02.798) and this sketch, Fairmount Water Works. Although Moran is best known for his landscapes, the artist did not shun the architectural and engineering wonders of the city. The Fairmount Water Works, housed in buildings inspired by ancient Greco-Roman structures, was one of Philadelphia’s most celebrated technological achievements.

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Crescentville

“You need not a period of pupilage in an artist’s studio. . . . let me earnestly recommend to you one Studio which you may freely enter . . . —the Studio of Nature.”1
—Asher B. Durand

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Cephalus and Procris

This drawing by Thomas Moran, which probably dates to early in his career, was based on a print from the Liber Studiorum (Book of Studies) series of J. M. W. Turner (1775–1851).1 The influential nineteenth-century British critic, John Ruskin, advised artists to copy prints from Turner’s Liber Studiorum as an adjunct to sketching from nature,2 and Moran biographer Thurman Wilkins relates that Moran traded some of his early watercolors for art books, including several sets of the Liber Studiorum.3

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Summer on the Susquehanna

What could be more inviting on a summer day than to find a shady spot to rest under a canopy of tree branches? In Summer on the Susquehanna, Thomas Moran used cool blues and deep greens to create a tranquil, restful scene warmed by the sun. Almost obscured in the thick grasses is a figure with a fishing pole heading toward the river, which can be glimpsed in the distance. A path opens up before him, zigzagging around the fallen tree and then out onto the sun-drenched shore.

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Windsor

During Thomas Moran’s 1862 trip to Great Britain, he had the opportunity to study the works of the British artist J. M. W. Turner (1775–1851) at the National Gallery.1 Turner bequeathed his art to Great Britain and, upon his death, the National Gallery received some 20,098 items, including drawings, prints, and sketchbooks. The critic John Ruskin, who knew Turner and championed his work, catalogued the collection, finishing in 1858.2 Thus, at the time of Thomas’s visit to England, he could have viewed not only Turner’s paintings but also his sketchbooks. Family lore relates that one of the attendants at the National Gallery “freely brought paintings by Turner and even drawings” to Moran for copying in a room set up for that purpose.3

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Hastings

In the summer of 1862, Thomas Moran and his older brother Edward (1829–1901) traveled to England. Edward enrolled in classes at the Royal Academy of Arts, but Thomas decided to forgo formal training to study the work of J. M. W. Turner (1775–1851) at London’s National Gallery.1 The brothers did not spend all of their time indoors, however. They traveled to their birthplace of Bolton, which Thomas depicted in Toothill Bridge, Bolton, Lancashire (02.801), and then toured the English countryside visiting locations depicted by Turner, such as Hastings.2

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Toothill Bridge, Bolton, Lancashire

When Thomas Moran and his brother Edward (1829–1901) visited Great Britain in 1862, they were there to study art, but it was also a homecoming. The brothers were born in Bolton, England; they emigrated with their family to the United States in 1844, after technological innovations in the textile industries had led to the unemployment of handloom weavers such as their parents.1 In fact, Friedrich Engels, in his 1845 study of industrialization and its consequences for the working class in Great Britain, noted that Bolton was “among the worst” of the industrial towns, the polluted waterway little more than a “string of stagnant pools” that contributed “to the total pollution of the air.”2

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Spruce Creek

“I must know the rocks and the trees and the atmosphere and the mountain torrents . . .”1
—Thomas Moran

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Pines in the Villa Borghese, Rome

At first glance, we might wonder why this is entitled Pines in the Villa Borghese, Rome as it appears that only a single pine tree fills the central portion of the page; however, a closer look reveals another pine faintly outlined in the background. Thomas Moran made this sketch with various shades of brown wash during his visit to Rome in 1867. Although merely a sketch—and one that might seem incomplete, as art historian Joni Kinsey has observed—these pines became a source of inspiration for a variety of later works1, including Solitude (14.635), a lithograph Moran made in 1869, two years after he returned to the United States.2

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Palace of the Caesars, Rome

Thomas Moran created at least five sketches of the Palace of the Caesars during his 1867 trip to Italy.1 Here, clouds drift in from the left and move across the sky to suggest the passage of time, while the ancient palace with its crumbling stonework yields to the ravages of the centuries. What perhaps fascinated Moran about the site was the almost organic quality of the buildings, which seem to have sprung spontaneously out of the hillside, only to return to nature upon being abandoned by their human occupants.

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The Great Aqueduct of the Campagna, Rome

Thomas Moran, accompanied by his wife Mary Nimmo (1842–1899) and their two-year-old son Paul (1864–1907), left the United States in the summer of 1866 for an extended visit to Europe. The family stopped briefly in England, and then spent the remainder of the year in Paris, visiting the numerous art galleries and exhibitions. By February 1867, the family was off to Italy, stopping at art museums from Milan to Naples before settling into life in Rome, where sketching kept Thomas occupied for months.1

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West Time, 1/2 Past 6 O'Clock

“That landscape painter that does not make his sky a very material part of his composition, neglects to avail himself of one of his greatest aids.”1 —John Constable

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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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