PHILADELPHIA, PA.- The Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts is presenting Thomas Eakins: Photographer, an exhibition honoring the centenary of Eakins' death and presenting over 60 rarely-seen photographs as well as sculptures and paintings by Eakins and his circle. The exhibition is on view through January 29, 2017 at PAFA, 118 North Broad Street in Philadelphia.
Known primarily as a painter, Eakins (1844-1916) taught and exhibited at PAFA and is inextricably linked with its history -- and with innovative artistic practices in 19th-century America that squarely confronted codes of gender and propriety in teaching and art making. Thomas Eakins: Photographer touches upon issues of representation, gender, and sexuality that are as relevant today as they were provocative when they were made.
"The exhibition will allow the public to examine in detail the depth of Eakins' involvement with photography: as collector of a wide range of formal portraits of himself; through informal images that he made of his family and friends; and his determined exploration, both scientific and artistic, of the nude figure, landscapes, and portraits," says Anna Marley, PAFA Curator of Historical American Art and curator of the exhibition with guest curator Susan Danly.
Thomas Eakins: Photographer tells the story of how Eakins' early adoption of the new art and science of photography changed his career, as well as the course of American figurative art.
"On the occasion of the hundredth anniversary of Thomas Eakins' death, this exhibition invites us to reflect on his innovations in photography and educating artists. His impact on PAFA, the Philadelphia art world, and American art is profound," says David R. Brigham, PAFA President and Acting Museum Director.
PAFA acquired a collection of over 600 photographic prints and negatives in 1985 from Charles Bregler, one of Eakins' students. On public view for the first time in a generation, this trove of images forms the core of this exhibition.
Beyond a comprehensive examination of a single artist's work, Thomas Eakins: Photographer seeks to engage audiences with photography as an art form, both historically and in the present day. The inclusion of reproductions from Eakins' photographic plates will allow visitors to understand the notion of artistic intent - something not well understood within the medium of photography and which many still see as a more of a mechanical process than one shaped by an individual artistic vision.
Many of the photographs in the exhibition were taken at PAFA by Eakins and his circle, while other images are from idyllic areas in the Philadelphia suburbs, and from Eakins' home at 1729 Mount Vernon Street in the city's Fairmount neighborhood.The exhibition is divided thematically into five sections:
Photography and Eakins' Teaching Practice documents the practice of professional models, and even Eakins and his students, posing unclothed for the camera. Designed as a freeing and experimental learning experience of the human form and notions of gender and community, it nonetheless contributed to his forced resignation from PAFA in 1886.
The Nude Outdoors details Eakins' inspiration for his art and teaching in classical Greece that inspired him to photograph himself and his male students swimming and playing pipes, evoking the classical theme of Arcadia - a harmonious vision of life in nature.
Photography and the Past suggests how his interest in American history informed his differing attitudes toward masculine and feminine creativity and discusses his participation in a revival of popular interest in the colonial past and Philadelphia history.
Intimate Portraits - Family and Friends reveals the people, animals, and places that sustained Eakins following his controversial tenure at PAFA, and highlights the diversity of the new medium of photography in Philadelphia at the turn of the century.
Portraits of Thomas Eakins presents an evolving picture of Eakins over his lifetime through numerous photographs he accumulated of himself, taken as self portraits, by commercial photographers, family, and friends.