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

Catalogue Entry

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Photo: New-York Historical Society
Street View in Guayaquil (Johnson and Louis Rémy Mignot), 1859 (Hills no. 34.0.2r). Detail
Detail
Photo: Patricia Hills
Street View in Guayaquil (Johnson and Louis Rémy Mignot), 1859 (Hills no. 34.0.2r). Detail
Detail
Photo: Patricia Hills
Street View in Guayaquil (Johnson and Louis Rémy Mignot), 1859 (Hills no. 34.0.2r). Detail
Detail
Photo: Patricia Hills
Street View in Guayaquil (Johnson and Louis Rémy Mignot), 1859 (Hills no. 34.0.2r). Detail
Detail
Photo: Patricia Hills
Street View in Guayaquil (Johnson and Louis Rémy Mignot), 1859 (Hills no. 34.0.2r). Verso
Verso
Photo: Patricia Hills
34.0 Collaborations

Johnson made several paintings in collaboration with his fellow American artists Louis Rémy Mignot (1831–1870), Worthington Whittredge (1820–1910), and Jervis McEntee (1828–1891). All three are best known as Hudson River School landscape painters; Johnson painted the figures that people their landscapes and interiors.

Johnson’s earliest collaborations were with Mignot: first in The Hague, where they had met during Johnson’s stay, 1851–1855 (Poort van een Kastel bij Winter [Doorway of a Castle in Winter], c.1851–52), and later in America, when Mignot was developing sketches he had made during his 1857 trip to Ecuador with Frederic Church (Street View in Guayaquil, 1859).

Johnson and McEntee were close confidants. They socialized, traveled together, and exchanged letters across decades; Johnson makes many appearances in McEntee’s diaries. Together, they painted Landscape with Figures, c. 1862 and Children in the Wood (Percival P. and Madeleine Baxter), 1882.

Johnson and Whittredge were longtime friends as well. As young men they lived together in Düsseldorf where both were studying painting, and there worked together in Emanuel Leutze’s studio on Leutze’s monumental painting Washington Crossing the Delaware, 1851. Later in America, c. 1864–65, they collaborated on the interior scenes An Old New England Kitchen and Sunday Morning.

Johnson’s relationships with these artists were mutually beneficial, personally and professionally, and the works benefited from the artists’ complementary strengths. —AM

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Hills no. 34.0.2r
Street View in Guayaquil (Johnson and Louis Rémy Mignot)
New-York Historical Society title: Street View in Guayaquil, Ecuador
Alternate titles: Street View in Guayaquil; Village in South America
1859
Oil on canvas
24 x 36 in. (61 x 91.4 cm)
Signed and dated lower right: "Mignot/ 59"
Description / Remarks

MacGibeny, 2021: Johnson and Louis Rémy Mignot first collaborated when both young artists were in The Hague, The Netherlands, in the early 1850s. Years later, in America, Johnson added the figures to this landscape painted by Mignot. Mignot had traveled to Ecuador with landscape painter Frederic Church in 1857, and this painting doubtlessly was inspired by that trip, during which he made many sketches.

Provenance
Sheppard Gandy, by 1859 (as Street View in Guayaquil by Louis Rémy Mignot)
[Somerville Gallery, New York, March 24–25, 1875, The Private Collection of Mr. Sheperd [sic] Gandy's Paintings, no. 131 (as Village in South America (The figures by E. Johnson))]
Robert Leighton Stuart, New York, March 25, 1875 (by purchase)
New York Public Library, New York, R. L. Stuart Collection, 1887 (by bequest)
New-York Historical Society, New York (on permanent loan)
Exhibitions
1859 NAD
National Academy of Design, New York, April 13–June 25, 1859. (NAD 1859), no. 262, as Street View in Guayaquil, by Louis Rémy Mignot; owner S. Gandy.
1996 North Carolina Museum
North Carolina Museum of Art, Raleigh, North Carolina, The Landscapes of Louis Rémy Mignot: A Southern Painter Abroad, October 20, 1996–January 19, 1997. (Manthorne and Coffey 1996), no. 47, pp. 78, 186, as Street View in Guayaquil. Traveled to: National Academy of Design, New York, February 20–May 11, 1997.
2016 N-YHS
New-York Historical Society, New York, Collector's Choice: Highlights from the Permanent Collections, August 19, 2016–June 2017.
2017 N-YHS
New-York Historical Society, New York, A Hudson River School Legacy: The Newman Bequest and Other Gifts, March 24–June 4, 2017.
References
NAD 1859
Catalogue of the Thirty-Fourth Exhibition. New York: National Academy of Design, 1859. Exhibition catalogue (1859 NAD), p. 24, no. 262, as Street View in Guayaquil, by Louis R. Mignot, owner S. Gandy.
Somerville Art Gallery 1875
The Collection of Paintings by American and Foreign Artists, Formed by Mr. Sheperd [sic] Gandy. New York: Somerville Art Gallery, March 24–25, 1875. Sale catalogue, p. 25, no. 131, as Village in South America (The figures by E. Johnson).
New York Public Library 1911
Astor Lenox and Tilden Foundations: Catalogue of Paintings in the Picture Galleries. New York: New York Public Library, 1911, no.188, as Street View in Guayaquil, Ecuador by L. Mignot.
Douglass 1999
Douglass, Julie M. "Lifetime Exhibition History." In Eastman Johnson: Painting America, by Teresa A. Carbone and Patricia Hills. Brooklyn, NY: Brooklyn Museum of Art, in association with Rizzoli International Publications, 1999. Exhibition catalogue, p. 259, as Street View in Guayaquil.
Hills Examination / Opinion
Examination date(s): April 15, 2019
Mignot, Louis Rémy
Keywords
Record last updated March 22, 2022. Please note that the information on this and all pages is periodically reviewed and subject to change.
Citation: Hills, Patricia, and Abigael MacGibeny. "Street View in Guayaquil (Johnson and Louis Rémy Mignot), 1859 (Hills no. 34.0.2r)." Eastman Johnson Catalogue Raisonné. www.eastmanjohnson.org/catalogue/entry.php?id=1510 (accessed on April 27, 2024).