GEORGE INNESS (1825-1894)
Provenance
C. Gardinier, Fultonville, New York, 1846Emerson McMillin, New York
American Art Association, New York, McMillin Sale, January 20-23, 1913, no. 182,
George H. Ainslie Galleries, New York
Agnes L. Dana, Bernardsville, New Jersey
O. Rundle Gilbert Auctioneer, New York, Dana Estate Sale, May 16, 1959
Adamson-Duvannes Gallery, Beverly Hills, California
Private Collection, California
Private Collection, Virginia
Private Collection
Exhibition
New York, American Art Union, Annual Exhibition, 1846, no. 6, ...More...as “Landscape- Afternoon"New York, National Academy of Design, 21st Annual Exhibition, 1846, no. 143, as “Landscape, An American Summer Afternoon”
Literature
LeRoy Ireland, Illustrated catalogue raisonne, 1965, p. 9, no. 16, illustratedNicolai Cikovsky, Jr., The Life and Works of George Inness, PhD. Dissertation,
1965, no. 6, illustrated
Michael Quick, George Inness, Catalogue Raissonne: Volume I, color plate
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The painting also reflects the subtle influence of French landscaper Regis Francois Gignoux, under whom the young Inness studied before making his first trip to Europe in 1851. This early training helped shape the atmospheric sensitivity and poetic naturalism that would later define his mature style.
Afternoon carries distinguished provenance, having passed through the collections of several important nineteenth and early twentieth century New Yorkers, including politician Cornelius Gardiner, financier and philanthropist Emerson McMillian, and later the philanthropist Agnes Ladson Dana. This lineage, combined with the paintings exceptional early date, makes it an especially significant example from the beginning of Innesss enduring contribution to American landscape painting.

