Governor's Creek, Florida

William Morris Hunt (1874)

Does the movement of the boat interrupt the scene’s stillness or become a part of it?

This creek scene condenses brown-green foliage against its reflection on the water’s surface. With horizontal green strokes, Hunt rendered Spanish moss hanging from tree branches, suggesting the damp warmth of the Florida climate. Governor’s Creek and the St. John River were fashionable resort areas when the artist painted this scene. However, this picture includes no evidence of leisure—instead, Hunt shows two small figures rowing their boat laboriously through the smooth water.

\ Artist

William Morris Hunt

American
Born:
1824
Died:
1879
Death place:
Isles of Shoals, New Hampshire

William Morris Hunt played an important role in bringing awareness of the French Barbizon school to the United States. Its style offered American painters an alternative to the Hudson River School by encouraging them to loosen their brushstrokes and focus more on atmosphere than solid form. Like the French artists he admired, Hunt preferred to paint outside in nature rather than within the traditional studio. He also championed rural farmers and humble peasants as worthy artistic subjects.

\ About

Medium

Oil on canvas

Credit

Gift of Mr. and Mrs. John D. Rockefeller 3rd