
WILLARD LEROY METCALF 1858-1925
Spring Landscape, Giverny, 1887
Oil on canvas, 19 1/2 X 25 1/4" (49.53 x 65.40 cm.)
Signed, lower left
Gift of Dr. John J. McDonough, 973-0-127
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Willard Leroy Metcalf, known to all his friends as "Metty" (he refused to
answer to Willard), is recognized as the "poet laureate of the New England hilW1 for
his quiet Impressionist landscapes of the farms and villages of that region. A founding
member of The Ten, Metcalf brought an Impressionist's understanding of color and light to
the seasonal cycles and shifts of weather that characterize New England. At the same time,
his observations of nature were built on particularity; what some have called his
"Yankee reticence' was in fact a naturalist's love of specifics combined with a deep
understanding of the underlying pattern of the whole.
For the first twenty years of his career Metcalf had been in turn a Hudson River School
painter, a prolific illustrator, and a Barbizon landscapist. His early artistic gifts were
noted and embraced by his parents; at age sixteen he was apprenticed to the painter George
Loring Brown and two years later was admitted to the Boston Museum of Fine Arts School,
where he studied under William Rimmer. In 1881, in order to earn passage to France,
Metcalf worked as an illustrator of magazine articles on the Zuni Native Americans. His
fascination with Zuni cosmology and ritual led him to postpone study abroad for another
year to join the pioneer anthropologist, Frank Hamilton Cushing, on a Smithsonian
expedition.
In the fall of 1883, Metcalf enrolled in the Acad6mie Julian in Paris, where he was
joined by other young Americans, among them Frank Weston Benson, Edward Simmons, and
Arthur Hoeber. For the next five years Metcalf remained in France, not only acquiring
professional polish at the academy but, far more importantly, joining his artist-
companions on extended explorations of the countryside. There were trips to Pont-Aven in
Brittany, where he met the American painter Alexander Harrison and the French artist Jules
Bastien-Lepage, and to Grez-sur-Loing, center of the international community of Barbizon
painters. But perhaps the most formative experiences in Metcalf's artistic development
were his visits to Giverny, home of the most famous Impressionist, Claude Monet.
Metcalf possibly first visited Giverny in 1886, where he sought out Monet and was
invited to lunch. He hiked and sketched in the countryside around Giverny in the company
of Monet's step-daughters, discovering a wealth of subjects-the river and the red-roofed
houses, the grain stacks and the gardens that Monet was transforming into brilliant
chromatic essays. Theodore Robinson also spent considerable time in Giverny and together,
Metcalf's and Robinson's discoveries attracted other Americans, to the point that Giverny
soon became a veritable colony of American Impressionists.
At the same time, Metcalf moved cautiously toward the more radical aspects of Monet's
style: the high keyed color, the division of light into its component hues, and the broken
brushwork that became the movement's signature traits. However, as is evident in Spring
Landscape, Giverny, Metcalf also continued to work through his near- simultaneous
discoveries of the merits of the Barbizon painters and James Abbott McNeill Whistler,
whose works he had encountered in Paris. Although painted in Giverny, the emphasis of Spring
Landscape, Giverny is on closely-related harmonies of russets, greens, and grays.
Though the landscape extends to buildings and hills in the far distance, its composition
reads more as a series of shallow planes; its larger forms are broadly painted, its
details mere swift flicks of contrasting hue. There is nothing here yet to suggest
Metcalf's later style save that the scene is flooded with the peaceful warmth of a summer
day that could only have been observed en plein-air.
BRUCE W. CHAMBERS