loading loading
Eastman Johnson Catalogue Raisonné
Patricia Hills, PhD, Founder and Director | Abigael MacGibeny, MA, Project Manager

Catalogue Entry

enlarge
Photo: Detroit Institute of Arts
Sketches of Seated Man, Squatting Man, and Camping Equipment [verso of Our Camp on Kettle River], c.1857, January (Hills no. 38.1.5v). Inscription
Inscription
Photo: Detroit Institute of Arts
38.1 Wisconsin & Minnesota Territory Scene Drawings

In the summer of 1856—soon after his late 1855 return to the United States from Europe—Johnson traveled west to Superior, Wisconsin, to visit his brother Reuben Johnson and his sister Sarah Osgood Johnson and her husband William Henry Newton. Superior was a growing town, specifically growing on land that had been Ojibwe territory; as many speculators were doing at that time, Johnson made some real estate investments. While in Superior he made portraits of family members and other residents. In 1857 he turned down a commission from Henry Wadsworth Longfellow to draw a portrait of Longfellow’s daughters in favor of a second trip to Superior and the Lake Superior region, including part of what was then Minnesota Territory. As he wrote to Longfellow on June 3, 1857,

One might reasonably wonder what attraction that wild region can have for an artist, in comparison with such advantages as would result to me from your kind & flattering offer, the patronage of the most celebrated in the most refined of places. Perhaps I cannot entirely justify it, but in a visit to that country last season I found so much of the picturesque, & of a character so much to my taste & in my line, that I then determined to employ this summer or a portion of it in making sketches of Frontier life, a national feature of our present condition & a field for art that is full of interest, & freshness & pleasing nature, & yet that has been but little treated [Quoted Carbone 1999a, p. 36].

That summer Johnson set out with local guide Stephen Bunga to see and depict Ojibwe encampments and people. He created a distinct body of work including eighteen paintings and twenty-five drawings of encampments, individuals, and groups that are an important record of Ojibwe life at that time, as well as Johnson’s interests and developing style. —AM

View all works in this theme »

Hills no. 38.1.5v
Baur no. 398
Sketches of Seated Man, Squatting Man, and Camping Equipment [verso of Our Camp on Kettle River]
c.1857, January
Pencil on lined blue wove paper
6 5/8 x 9 1/16 in. (16.8 x 23 cm)
Inscribed center left edge, not in Johnson's hand: Eastman Johnston [sic]
Recto: Our Camp on Kettle River, 1857, January (Hills no. 38.1.4r)
Description / Remarks

MacGibeny, 2022: According to the Detroit Institute of Arts, this is a spread from a once-bound small sketchbook.

Baur 1940, p. 79, note for the recto, Our Camp on Kettle River: "On reverse are pencil sketches of a sleigh, an axe in a stump, a bridle and two figures. Kettle River, a small stream in Minnesota, rises about 50 miles south-west of Superior and Duluth and flows into the St. Croix."

Provenance
Likely Eastman Johnson estate/Mrs. Eastman Johnson, New York, 1906 (by bequest)
Albert Rosenthal, New Hope, Pennsylvania, until 1939 (likely by purchase from Mrs. Johnson in 1915)
Estate of Albert Rosenthal, with Albert Duveen, New York, 1940
Detroit Institute of Arts, Detroit, March 15, 1956 (by gift)
References
Baur 1940
Baur, John I. H. An American Genre Painter: Eastman Johnson, 1824–1906. Brooklyn, NY: Brooklyn Museum, Brooklyn Institute of Arts and Sciences, 1940. Exhibition catalogue (1939 Brooklyn Museum), p. 79, no. 398.
Record last updated March 27, 2022. Please note that the information on this and all pages is periodically reviewed and subject to change.
Citation: Hills, Patricia, and Abigael MacGibeny. "Sketches of Seated Man, Squatting Man, and Camping Equipment [verso of Our Camp on Kettle River], c.1857, January (Hills no. 38.1.5v)." Eastman Johnson Catalogue Raisonné. www.eastmanjohnson.org/catalogue/entry.php?id=1350 (accessed on April 30, 2024).