Thomas Hart Benton: Lithograph Show

Overview

Thomas Hart Benton was an American painter and Muralist, whose work spanned over 60 years leaving an enduring impact on what American painting and the celebration of its rural regions, would become.


Benton shrugged off the family pressure to become a politician and in 1907 enrolled at The School of Art Institute of Chicago. After two years, like many American students at the time, Benton travelled to Paris and enthralled himself in the vibrant avant-grade art scene. Whilst there, he met important North American artists like Diego Rivera and Stanton McDonald-Wright, who were crafting a movement based around Synchromism. Upon his return and during WW1, Benton designed camouflage for identifying American and allied ships at sea, which he later described as the most important artistic endeavour of his life.


Once married and settled back into family life, Benton declared himself an enemy of modernism - a disenfranchisement familiar with post-war thinking after witnessing the destructive power of machines technology during the war. He begun a naturalist, representational way of thinking which would later be described as Regionalism. Through his detailed El Greco-esque representation of often overlooked and marginalised regions of American life, Benton celebrated the relationship to land and sometimes controversial history of rural America. Working woman and men depicted with the same insatiable detail and beauty as angelic biblical figures adorning chapels all over Europe. Benton’s lasting impact on American painting can be seen through his contributions to the generations of artist under his tutelage, which challenged and carried the baton on for the distinctly American way of being.

Installation Views