|
The First Art Newspaper on the Net |
|
Established in 1996 |
|
Saturday, December 21, 2024 |
|
Georgia's Tallulah Falls is the subject of a museum exhibition |
|
|
Caitlin Peterson (American, b. 1992), Tallulah Gorge 04, 2013. Digital C-print, 12 × 15 inches. Georgia Museum of Art, University of Georgia; Museum purchase with funds provided by the Richard E. and Lynn Rudikoff Berkowitz Acquisition Endowment. GMOA 2024.30.
|
ATHENS, GA.- When George Cooke painted his image of tourists awestruck by north Georgias Tallulah Falls in 1841, the natural wonder was already a major attraction. The focused exhibition On Wonder and Witnessing at Tallulah Falls raises questions about what, exactly, a natural wonder is. On view at the Georgia Museum of Art at the University of Georgia September 7, 2024, to January 12, 2025, it includes Cookes painting at its center. Through placing Cookes image alongside Caitlin Petersons contemporary photographs of the area, the exhibition sheds light on the complexities of designating natural marvels and the contradictions inherent in observing nature.
Cooke was born on the eastern shore of Maryland and taught himself art at a young age. Despite showing early talent, he couldnt afford expensive art lessons, so he became a partner in a mercantile business in Washington, D.C. After his dry goods store failed and his attempts at land speculation were unsuccessful, Cooke bought four versions of Gilbert Stuarts portraits of the first four presidents and painted copies of them. This marked the beginning of his career as a traveling portrait artist. Between 1834 and 1837, Cooke traveled extensively, including in Georgia. Whether they were history scenes, portraits or landscapes, his images represented the popular academic style of balance, order, harmonious coloring, and clear and accurate drawing that produces idealized but realistic-looking work.
Tallulah Falls, Georgia, boasts a fascinating history. Just two years before Cooke painted the image, the U.S. government had forcibly expelled the Cherokee Indians from this region. Tallulah is a nonsense word meant to sound like the Cherokee language but with no actual meaning. It gestures toward the ancestral history of the landscape while overshadowing its deep cultural and spiritual history.
The area became a popular resort during the 19th century, then the site of a dam and hydroelectric facility in the early 20th century. Often referred to as the Niagara Falls of the South, the Tallulah Gorge is an awe-inspiring fissure 2 miles long and nearly 1,000 feet deep. Ella May Thornton, Georgias state librarian, named it one of the Seven Natural Wonders of Georgia in a book by that title in 1926, and it remains a popular tourist attraction.
Peterson takes the Seven Natural Wonders of Georgia as the title of a series of large-format photographs that examine the relationship between people and the landscape. Her photographs consider land use, nature tourism and human-made spectacles of nature. She often highlights the meeting of the natural and artificial. For example, she shows us signs that tout the best or only views of the gorge to reveal how our experiences of these places are controlled.
Together, the different views of this Georgia attraction offer an opportunity to take a step back and think about how our efforts to frame nature end up keeping it at arms length.
|
|
Today's News
September 4, 2024
A Finnish artist and the apartment and paintings she left behind in SoHo
University Archives announces Rare Signed Autographs, Manuscripts, Books & Memorabilia auction
Music stays in tune at Roland Auctions NY August 24th multi-estates auction
Rare German Schucos & pre-war tin planes consistently defied pre-sale estimates at Milestone's Aug. 24 toy auction
Georgia's Tallulah Falls is the subject of a museum exhibition
Important key works from the various periods of Robert Longo's production on view at The ALBERTINA
Splendid works from the Baroque at Koller Auctions
Sotheby's to offer Abrams Collection, including works by Noguchi and Marisol
Leen Voet will exhibit new works from two different series in Brussels
The 4 mysterious guardians of artist Lee Bul
Lee Kang-So joins Thaddaeus Ropac
Christie's to offer figures and snuff-boxes from the collection of Franz Eugen Burda
Creating an artistic buzz, one real estate development at a time
Heritage Auctions to offer more than 2,000 costumes, weapons, props, set decorations from Game of Thrones
Sotheby's unveils personal artifacts from the collections of Amy Winehouse & Marianne Faithfull
Puppentheatersammlung to open at its new location in Kraftwerk Mitte
Major fashion exhibition featuring Alexander McQueen and Ann Ray arrives this fall at GRAM
Gagosian to present new works by Nan Goldin in New York
24 works of fiction and poetry to read this fall
Born into fame, this actress could soon have more of her own
Galerie Jeanne Bucher Jaeger announces 'Evi Keller: Origins'
The Air de Paris gallery exhibits around forty masks by Ingrid Luche
Safety Tips for Driving a Rental Car in a Foreign Land
Elevate Your Art Career with a Professional Online Portfolio
|
|
|
|
|
Museums, Exhibits, Artists, Milestones, Digital Art, Architecture, Photography, Photographers, Special Photos, Special Reports, Featured Stories, Auctions, Art Fairs, Anecdotes, Art Quiz, Education, Mythology, 3D Images, Last Week, . |
|
|
|
Royalville Communications, Inc produces:
|
|
|
Tell a Friend
Dear User, please complete the form below in order to recommend the Artdaily newsletter to someone you know.
Please complete all fields marked *.
Sending Mail
Sending Successful
|
|