NEW ORLEANS, LA.- The New Orleans Museum of Art is presenting Inventing Acadia: Painting and Place in Louisiana, on view through January 26, 2020. The first major exhibition on Louisiana landscape painting in more than 40 years, Inventing Acadia explores the rise of landscape painting in Louisiana during the 19th century, revealing its role in creatingand exportinga new vision for American landscape art that was vastly different than that to be found in the rest of the United States.
Inventing Acadia showcases how 19th century landscape painters from across the globe came together in Louisiana to form a new school of landscape painting that rivaled any other in the country, said Susan Taylor, NOMAs Montine McDaniel Freeman Director. Offering a newly expansive view of the American landscape and its people, Inventing Acadia is the first exhibition to place Louisiana landscape painting in a wider national and international context.
From the early 19th century onwards, Louisianas dense forests and tangled, impenetrable swamplandsbranded as Acadie, or Acadiacame to represent Americas fascination with untamed wilderness. In Louisiana, artists encountered a landscape utterly unlike the Northeastern forests and mountains around which the very idea of the American landscape had been formed. Louisiana drew painters from France, New York, Boston, Mexico and the Caribbean, who made the region a testing ground for new ideas about landscape representation. This resulted in landscape paintings that brought American art into conversation with a new type of terrain, as well as a more international set of artistic and cultural references. Far from a regional phenomenon, Inventing Acadia shows how Louisiana landscape painting was part of a national-and even international--landscape conversation.
Inventing Acadia: Painting and Place in Louisiana is accompanied by a site-specific contemporary art installation in NOMAs Great Hall by the artist Regina Agu, created in partnership with A Studio in the Woods, through an artist residency. For her project, Agu created a large-scale photographic panorama that wraps the museums Great Hall, based on her experiences revisiting the sites of many of the historical landscape paintings in the exhibition.