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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: Courtesy of Sotheby’s, Inc. © 2020
At the Maple Sugar Camp, 1870 (Hills no. 13.5.13). Verso inscription
Verso inscription
Photo: Unknown
13.5 Maple Sugar Camps, 1860s—Small Scenes

The making of maple sugar was a traditional industry for Maine people, as it still is today. Johnson specifically traveled to Maine, his birthplace, in the early spring of the early 1860s to study and watch farmers as they tapped the trees, gathered sap, and then set up camps to boil the sap down to thick, sweet maple syrup. As scholar Brian Allen has pointed out, during the Civil War years, maple syrup was a patriotic alternative to the sugar cane sugar of Southern plantations [See Allen 2004]. Allen quotes the Philadelphia physician and abolitionist Benjamin Rush, who said in 1792: “I cannot help contemplating a maple sugar tree without a species of veneration, for I behold in it a happy means of rendering commerce and slavery of African brethren in sugar islands as unnecessary” [See Allen 2004, p. 47].

The camps became hubs of dancing, flirting, and jocular humor, and included children mingling with adults. Although Johnson worked on making sketches for years, he never completed a finished version of the “larger & more pretenscious [sic] sugaring picture” that he wrote to patron John Coyle he had planned to make. —PH

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Hills no. 13.5.13
At the Maple Sugar Camp
1870
Oil on canvas laid down on paper board
12 1/4 x 15 1/4 in. (31.1 x 38.7 cm)
Signed and dated verso: E. Johnson./.70 [inscription is visible through rectangle cut in back of board]
Description / Remarks

Hills, 2021: Two boys sitting on logs and playing cards. It is possible this painting was begun 1861–65, and subsequently finished and signed in 1870 when Johnson either sold it or sent it out for exhibition.

Provenance
Private collection, Santa Barbara, California, by 2002
[Hirschl & Adler Galleries, New York, by March 6, 2002]
Sotheby's, May 22, 2002, Sale 7802, American Paintings, Drawings and Sculpture, lot 156 (as At the Maple Sugar Camp); did not sell
Questroyal Fine Art, LLC, New York, by 2009
Judith G. and Steaven K. Jones, Pacific Palisades, California (by purchase)
Exhibitions
2018 Crocker Art Museum
Crocker Art Museum, Sacramento, California, American Beauty and Bounty: The Judith G. and Steaven K. Jones Collection of Nineteenth-Century Painting, October 28, 2018–January 27, 2019. (Exhibition catalogue: Robertson and Shields 2019).
References
Johnson, Eastman 1864b
Eastman Johnson letter to John Coyle, March 13, 1864, Johnson states that he plans to do a "larger & more pretenscious [sic]" sugaring picture and is "starting for the country to make studies for a month or six weeks"; that this is his fourth annual trip to Maine to do so; and that he "hope[s] to paint it next autumn & winter," quoted in Selection of Artist’s Letters 1999.
Selection of Artist's Letters 1999
"A Selection of the Artist's Letters." 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.
Robertson and Shields 2019
Robertson, Bruce, and Scott Shields. American Beauty and Bounty: The Judith G. and Steaven K. Jones Collection of Nineteenth-Century Painting. Sacramento, CA: Crocker Art Museum, 2019. Exhibition catalogue (2018 Crocker Art Museum).
Hills Examination / Opinion
Examination date(s): 2002-03-30; 2012-07-12?
Examination notes: Thin lines visible, in EJ technique
Hills opinion letter: April 4, 2002 view »
Hills opinion letter: April 19, 2002 view »
Keywords
Record last updated July 8, 2021. Please note that the information on this and all pages is periodically reviewed and subject to change.
Citation: Hills, Patricia, and Abigael MacGibeny. "At the Maple Sugar Camp, 1870 (Hills no. 13.5.13)." Eastman Johnson Catalogue Raisonné. www.eastmanjohnson.org/catalogue/entry.php?id=172 (accessed on May 4, 2024).