Walk: Hood
Distance: 4 miles
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| George Caleb Bingham (1811-1879), Boatman on the Missouri, 1843, oil on canvas, de Young Museum, San Francisco |
Why did Ciwt choose this painting as one of her Portraits of America? Stay tuned...
There are so many wonderful Portraits of America and so many individual thoughts about which belong toward the top of the list of favorites. Ciwt has decided to make her list from art in our museums right here in San Francisco. Hopefully her choices speak for themselves but she might just add small comments.
Perhaps because she grew up near the fountainhead and banks of the Mighty Mississppi, her list begins with this scene of 19th century Midwest river life. The Missouri and Mississippi were the main regional highways then, central to the economy and culture and serving as major transportation routes for goods and people. (Ciwt herself had a great grandfather who traveled the Mississippi between his homes and enterprises in Minneapolis and Natchez).
Who better to capture those times and 'rugged individualism' than initially self-taught frontiershman, politician, artist George Caleb Bingham, known as "The Missouri Artist?"
At one point, to improve his art education, Bingham studied at the Dusseldorf Germany School of Painting, where he even befriended Emanuel Leutze, the painter of Washington Crossing the Delaware.

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