The Art of Summer in 10 Paintings | Art & Object (2024)

At LargeJuly 21, 2023Cynthia Close

The Art of Summer in 10 Paintings | Art & Object (1)

The Metropolitan Museum of Art

Asher B. Durand, Summer Afternoon, 1865.

Sun, sand, sky, water, and women predominate as subject matter when artists throughout history turned their attention to communicating the light, languid heat, and soft sensuality of long summer days. As these days approach, we can look to these artists to remind us what the season is for—picnics in the park with family and friends, busy beaches, and the suspension of time between the promise of spring and the fulfilling harvest of fall.

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Summer, 1660–64

Depicting the four seasons is a subject matter many artists have turned to, including Nicholas Poussin (1594–1665), a popular French painter of the classical Baroque style. Late summer was often a time of early harvest, as seen in the painting Summer or Ruth and Boaz. Here Poussin favors line and landscape, combining the biblical love story of Ruth and Boaz with the fecundity of a wheat harvest, the drinking of wine, and making bread.

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Rhyl Sands, 1854

English landscape painter David Cox (1783–1859) achieved fame as a watercolorist before he transitioned to oil painting near the end of his career, completing over 300 works in that medium. In Rhyl Sands (1854) the tiny figures seem no more than flotsam and jetsam scattered on a vast beach under a great expanse of sky. The gestural quality of this painting makes it easy to see why Cox is considered an early precursor to Impressionism.

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the metropolitan museum of art

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Summer Afternoon, 1865

The heat of a late afternoon summer sun radiates from this landscape by Asher B. Durand (1796–1886), who was trained as an engraver before he became a founding member of the Hudson River School. Aproponent of painting en plein air,Durand'smythic, pastoral landscapes, infused with light and air, transport us into the wild heart of nature.

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Summer Scene (Bathers), 1869

A casual male eroticism permeates this scene of young men having a leisurely day swimming on a riverbank. It is thought that this painting may have influenced American artist Thomas Eakins’ work, The Swimming Hole (1885). Frédéric Bazille (1841–1870) was a French artist and friend of Impressionists Claude Monet, Alfred Sisley, and Édouard Manet. He died at the age of twenty-eight from wounds sustained on the battlefield during the Franco-Prussian War.

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Summer Night (1890)

The preeminent American artist Winslow Homer (1821–1896) is best known for his windswept portrayals of people on land and at sea, which often take on an underlying ominous tone, as in Summer Night. Turbulence and mystery enshroud these moonlit female figures. They seemto be dancing, with one partner peering over the other'sshoulder, perhaps just out of viewof agroupof shadowy figureson the right.

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The National Gallery of Art

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Children on the Beach, 1884

Born in what is now Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, the beloved American Impressionist Mary Cassatt (1844–1926) spent most of her adult life painting in France.Women in scenes of domestic life were her primary subjects, with emphasis on the intimacy between mothers and their children. In this charming early work two little girls, possibly twins, are dressed in identical pinafores and seem fully engaged playing with their buckets in the sand.

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Summer Idleness: Day Dreams, 1909

In the paintings of John William Godward (1861–1922) beautiful women in revealing softly-draped fabric are self-consciously placed in melodramatic poses against elements of classical Roman architecture, paying homage to the influence of Dutch painter Lawrence Alma-Tadema. Painting in a Neo-Classicist style, the intense color and sensuality of Godward’s female subjects, occasionally depicted in full frontal nudity, align him mistakenly with the Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood. His paintings fell out of style with the onset of modernism, and disowned by his family for his decision to become an artist, he ended his life at age sixty-one.

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Summer Interior, 1909

The quiet, nearly airless interiors of Edward Hopper's (1882–1967) paintings reflect his own shyness and reclusive life and seem apropos in our current period of isolation. Were it not for the clue in the title it would be difficult to guess the time of year depicted in this early work. It is the young woman’s partial nakedness, a rare subject for Hopper, situatednear abeam of sunlight that hints at summertime's warmth.

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Summer Day, 1915

The air appears almost breathable in this post-Impressionist painting of windblown clouds by the self-taught Canadian artist Tom Thomson (1877–1917). He was an enthusiastic outdoorsman and his work reflected the trees, skies, lakes, and rivers of rural Ontario where he spent most of his time. His accidental death by drowning at the age of thirty-nine sparked nefarious rumors of his possible murder or suicide.

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Happy Days, 1910–1920

Ohio-born American Impressionist Edward H. Potthast(1857–1927) studied lithography before he became the quintessential painter of people at leisure, usually seen on the sun saturated beaches of New York and New England. In this painting groups of children crowding along the water’s edge sparkle like little jewels in the summer sun, reminders of the freedom of youth in happier times.

About the Author

Cynthia Close

Cynthia Close holdsaMFA from Boston University, was an instructor in drawing and painting, Dean of Admissions at The Art Institute of Boston, founder of ARTWORKS Consulting, and former executive director/president of Documentary Educational Resources, a film company.She was the inaugural art editor for the literary and art journal Mud Season Review.She now writes about art and culture for several publications.

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painting

summer

seasons

David Cox

Asher Durand

Hudson River School

landscape

Nicholas Poussin

Bazille

Mary Cassatt

Winslow Homer

John William Godward

Edward Hopper

Tom Thomson

Edward Potthast

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