Jasper Francis Cropsey, in the company of Frederic Edwin
Church, Asher B. Durand, and John F. Kensett, was one of
the most respected painters of the Hudson River School. At
the peak of his career—from the mid-1840s through the
1870s—Cropsey enjoyed fame in both England and the
United States for his views of American scenery, particularly
his richly colored canvases capturing the glories of the
American autumn.
Born on Staten Island, New York, on February 18, 1823, Cropsey
trained to be an architect. At the age of thirteen he made
and submitted a scale model of a country house to the annual
exhibition of the Mechanics’ Institute in New York
City. His model won a medal and brought the youth to the
attention of New York architect Joseph Trench. Cropsey served
a five-year apprenticeship with Trench, who encouraged him
to embellish his architectural drawings with landscape backgrounds
and figures. To this end, Trench enabled Cropsey to study
drawing with the landscape painter Edward Maury.
Although the practice of architecture supported Cropsey
throughout the 1840s, it was the rendering of his designs
on paper rather than the design process itself that ignited
his passion. His success with the watercolor medium kindled
a desire to paint with oils, which Cropsey took up in 1841.
He learned to handle the new medium by copying from existing
works of art, which included his own watercolors as well
as Dutch paintings and engravings of paintings by Claude
Lorrain. In 1843 he participated for the first time in an
exhibition at the National Academy of Design. He was made
an associate of the Academy the following year on the merits
of View of Orange County with Greenwood Lake in the Distance.
Cropsey had discovered Greenwood Lake in southeastern New
York State by 1843. He opened a studio there and began submitting
views of the lake to various exhibitions in New York. Cropsey’s
attachment to the area was an enduring one. In 1866, he purchased
a forty-five-acre tract outside the village of Warwick near
Greenwood Lake where he constructed Aladdin, a 29-room Gothic
Revival mansion with studio.
Following his marriage in the spring of 1847, Cropsey and
his bride, Maria Cooley, embarked upon a two-year European
honeymoon. They spent the summer in England before traveling
through Italy with American painters Christopher Pearse Cranch
and Thomas Hicks and sculptor William Wetmore Story. During
a lengthy stay in Rome, Cropsey worked out of the former
studio of Thomas Cole, the founding father of the Hudson
River School. Upon his return to the United States in the
summer of 1849, Cropsey settled down to painting as a full-time
occupation. He shared a studio with Edwin White at 114 White
Street in New York City, where he taught and worked up his
European sketches into finished oils. His pupils included
the gifted American landscapist David Johnson. Cropsey made
frequent sketching trips to the White Mountains, the Catskill
Mountains, Greenwood Lake, and Newport, Rhode Island. This
productive and rewarding period culminated in Cropsey’s
rise to academician status in the National Academy in 1851.
In June 1856 the Cropseys again went abroad, this time renting
a home and studio in the Kensington section of London. The
artist arrived with commissions from American patrons for
paintings of castles and abbey ruins, thus he traveled a
great deal through the English countryside. He found, in
turn, that his American subjects were just as eagerly desired
abroad. The London printer Gambert and Company commissioned
thirty-six views from Cropsey for publication in American
Scenery.
During his seven years in England, Cropsey kept company
with leading figures in the British art world, including
the director of the National Gallery, Sir Charles Eastlake,
and author John Ruskin, leader of the Pre-Raphaelite movement,
who influenced a generation of American and British painters
through his advocacy of painting natural objects in their
natural settings. While abroad, Cropsey began exhibiting
the autumnal scenes that would become his hallmark. His monumental Autumn—On
the Hudson River of 1860 (National Gallery of Art, Washington
D. C.) was lauded by Queen Victoria and the London press,
earning Cropsey trans-Atlantic repute as “America’s
painter of autumn.”
Shortly after his return to America, Cropsey undertook American
Autumn, Starruca Valley, Erie Railroad, a large painting
celebrating a prosperous nation newly at peace. A
chromolithograph after the painting was published by Thomas
Sinclair of Philadelphia, which immediately put Cropsey’s
work within easy reach of a mass market. He was commissioned
by Milton Courtright to paint Valley of Wyoming (1865,
Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York), a painting measuring
seven feet in width. The sale of these paintings
gave him the money necessary to build Aladdin.
By the 1880s, Cropsey could no longer afford what had become
an extravagant lifestyle. Aladdin was sold by his creditors,
and in June 1885 the Cropseys settled in a modest home in
the town of Hastings-on-Hudson, New York. Cropsey began painting
the Hudson River and the Palisades, the rocky outcroppings
on the Hudson’s west bank that are visible from Hastings.
Although his landscape subject matter remained the same,
his palette became increasingly high-keyed as a result of
his contact with the English Pre-Raphaelites. Cropsey died
at Hastings-on-Hudson on June 22, 1900. His home there has
been preserved as a center for the study of Cropsey and his
art.
Cropsey was a founding member of the American Water Color
Society in 1866. His other memberships included the Century
Club, the Lotos Club, the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine
Arts and the Artists Aid Society. Major examples of his work
are in the collections of the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston;
Peabody Institute, Baltimore; the New-York Historical Society;
Harvard University, Cambridge, Massachusetts; the Metropolitan
Museum of Art, New York; and the National Gallery of Art,
Washington, D. C.