Monday, April 6, 2026

Artist of the Day, April 6, 2026 : Sanford Robinson Gifford, an American painter (#2493)

The second-generation Hudson River School painter Sanford Robinson Gifford (1823 – 1880) built a reputation as a master of light and atmosphere. Born in Greenfield, Saratoga County, New York, as an infant he moved with his family to Hudson, New York, where his father operated and financed iron foundries and a bank. On his eldest brother Charles’s example, he became enamored of art at an early age and may have received some early instruction from Henry Ary, a landscape and portrait painter who had moved to Hudson from Catskill, where he had been a neighbor of Thomas Cole, the progenitor of the American landscape school. 

Gifford attended Brown University for two years, but did not graduate, telling his parents that he wished to be an artist. Soon after college, he went to New York City to study with the well-known art pedagogue (and fine watercolorist), the English emigré John Rubens Smith. Under Smith, and perhaps at his parents’ insistence, Gifford trained to become a portrait and figure painter, but longed to follow in Cole’s footsteps and to join what was already a small society of young artists inspired by Cole and Asher B. Durand, the president of the National Academy of Design, to pursue landscape painting. By 1847, Gifford had exhibited his first painting at the Academy, submitting almost annually thereafter. In 1850, he was elected an associate of the Academy and, in 1854, a full Academician.

Though Gifford’s signature style was emerging in the early 1850s, his artistic maturity did not come until well into his first trip to Europe, in 1855–57. An admirer of Turner since his boyhood perusals of his brother’s prints after the artist, Gifford studied and copied the master’s work in London’s National Gallery and even visited Turner’s champion, the critic John Ruskin, to discuss his work. Gifford moved on to visit France, Belgium, Holland, and Germany. At Düsseldorf, he paused for a time with the community of American artists studying at the academy in that city; then, in the company of several of them, he traveled down the Rhine into Switzerland and Italy, settling in Rome in the spring of 1856. 

The artist’s reputation mounted rapidly through the Civil War years, earned with masterworks such as the Metropolitan’s Gorge in the Mountains, in which the circular diffusion of sunlight seems to shape the terrain of the Catskill vale made famous in the fiction of Washington Irving and James Fenimore Cooper and in the early paintings of Cole. Such works were executed amidst the artist’s own service in the war, as a national guardsman stationed in defense of Washington, D.C. and Baltimore in the summers of 1861–63. 

In 1868–69, Gifford made his second and last Old World visit, this time adding an excursion down the Nile in Egypt and stops in Turkey and Greece to his return visits to Italy and other European nations. He lingered some six weeks in Venice, finding himself this time utterly seduced by the so-called Queen of the Adriatic. With its growing reputation as a tourist mecca, Venice became a frequent subject in the years thereafter, as did Italian subjects in general, such as the Metropolitan’s Tivoli and Isola Bella in Lago Maggiore. 

The last decade of Gifford’s career was unexceptional for him just after his return to the United States, but events of his final years may have stimulated fresh inspiration. In the mid-1870s, the artist lent his voice to those conservative academicians opposing the younger, emerging talents in Continental-trained figural art who lobbied intensely for more and better representation at the academy exhibitions. 

A founder of The Metropolitan Museum of Art in 1870, in 1881 Gifford was accorded the institution’s first monographic retrospective, in its new building in Central Park. The Museum in the same year also published the Memorial Catalogue of the Paintings of Sanford Robinson Gifford, N.A., compiled by his friend McEntee and the Museum’s Waldo Pratt, listing 735 works. Those form the majority, if scarcely all, of the output of this productive and first-rank Hudson River School painter.

© 2026. All content on this blog is protected by international copyright laws All images are copyrighted © by Sanford Robinson Gifford or assignee. Apart from fair dealing for the purpose of private study, research, criticism or review as permitted under the Copyright Act, the use of any image from this site is prohibited unless prior written permission is obtained. All images used for illustrative purposes only

Sanford Robinson Gifford
Study for a Self-Portrait
The Palisades, New York, 1854

Windsor Castle, 1855
Torre dei Schiavi, Roman Campagna, 1857-92
Kenilworth Castle, 1858
The Roman Campagna, 1859
Lake Scene, 1861
A Gorge in the Mountains, 1862
A Coming Storm, 1863
A View from the Berkshire Hills, near Pittsfield, Massachusetts, 1863
Lake Garda, Italy, 1863
Camp of the Seventh Regiment, near Frederick, Maryland, 1864
The Beach at Cohasset, 1864
Lake Scene, 1866
Morning in the Hudson, Haverstraw Bay, 1866
Whiteface Mountain from Lake Placid, 1866
Long Branch Beach, 1867
Sunrise, Long Branch, New Jersey, 1867
Isola Bella in Lago Maggiore, 1871
Kaaterskill Falls, 1871
 A Sudden Storm, Lake George, 1873
Mount Rainier, Bay of Tacoma – Puget Sound, 1875
The Maiden's Tower, 1876
Fire Island Beach, 1878
Mrs. Sanford Robinson Gifford, 1878
Sunset over New York Bay, 1878
Sunset Over the Palisades on the Hudson, 1879
Villa Malta, Rome, 1879
October in the Catskills, 1880
Ruins of the Parthenon, 1880
Tappan Zee


Saturday, February 28, 2026

Artist of the Day, February 28, 2026 : Myra Landau, a Romanian painter (#2492)

Myra Landau (1926 – 2018) was an artist and abstract painter involved in art research. Born in Bucharest, Romania, she was known largely for the work she made in Brazil, then Mexico for many years and later in Italy, Israel and The Netherlands.

Landau was born in Bucharest, Romania. At the age of 12, her Jewish family, fearing persecution by rising fascist forces, fled Romania just ahead of Ion Antonescu's coup d'état. After extensive travel throughout Europe, she finally arrived in Brazil. There, her great interest in artistic and intellectual life gave her the opportunity to meet painters like Di Cavalcanti, Antonio Dias, Wesley Duke Lee, Francisco Brennand, Antonio Dias and João Camara, the sculptor Sergio Camargo, the writer Jorge Amado and poet-musician-diplomat Vinicius de Morais, the musician-painter Dorival Caymmi.

Shy but determined, she started to paint. Her first works were figurative but gradually she began to realize that this was not her style and, influenced by Dufy, turned to Expressionism. She was greatly influenced by her uncle Marcel Janco (one of the founders of Dadaism) and the Brazilian engraver Oswaldo Goeldi. Critics, including Jorge A. Manrique who described her work as being "brutal and refined’ have recognized Landau's artistic contribution, describing it with high esteem.

Landau has lived in six countries. She married Miguel Salas Anzures, head of Fine Arts-INBA, Mexico. He broke with Socialist Realism, represented by painters like Diego Rivera, José Clemente Orozco, David Alfaro Siqueiros. This new expression of art was called Generación de la Ruptura. The members of this generation of artists include native-born Mexicans and immigrants, many of whom were refugees from World War II. 

Landau introduced a new technique of engraving on metal, utilizing acids, but printed from the surface, called Metal Relief. She had her first exhibition in Mexico in 1963 and gradually became one of the leading Latin American women artists. Her Metal Relief works were well received by art critic Paul Westheim in the important magazine El Nuevo Arte de los Metales and by art connoisseur, reviewer and historian Jorge Olvera. She continued her in-depth research and found her definitive expression in painting with pastel on raw linen. In this technique she was a pioneer. Her thematic approach was also new: she was the first Latin American abstract painter to use movements of free geometrical lines. All her works since 1965 are called Rhythms.

Landau had more than sixty individual exhibitions, the most important of which was held in 1987 in the Museum of Modern Art in Mexico City. She participated in 150 group exhibitions in Mexico, France, Italy, Brazil, Chile, the United States and Cuba.

In 1994, she moved from Mexico to Rome, Italy where she stayed until 2010 and later to Jerusalem, Israel where she lived for 6 years. Landau resided in The Netherlands for two years.

Politically, she was a vocal critic of the Israeli government and described herself as stateless: "I don't believe in borders, I don't like flags, I have no boundaries. My only homeland: friendship, love and justice for all." 

© 2026. All content on this blog is protected by international copyright laws All images are copyrighted © by Myra Landau or assignee. Apart from fair dealing for the purpose of private study, research, criticism or review as permitted under the Copyright Act, the use of any image from this site is prohibited unless prior written permission is obtained. All images used for illustrative purposes only


Ms. Myra Landau
Candelabros, 1953
Garrafas, 1954

Cavalete, 1955
Violão, 1956
Ritmo Nº.7, 1970
Ritmo continuo, 1971
Ritmo en M, 1971
Ritmo ascendente I, 1973
Ritmo carioca III, 1973
Ritmo triangular, 1974
Ritmo imprevisto, 1975
Ritmo lleno de misterio, 1975
Mural mobil 1, 1976
Ritmo V, 1977
Ritmo cortado, 1979
Ritmo dinamico, 1979
Ritmo que te vio verde, 1979
Untitled, 1979
Untitled, 1979
Rimo de Ciudad Nueva, 1980
Ritmo transparente azul, 1981
Ritmo del futuro de America, 1982
Untitled, 1990
Untitled, 1995
Ritmo terremotato, 1996
Ritmo loquisimo, 2003
Ritmo di alghe, 2004
Ritmo azul I, 2005
Ritmo vagabondo, 2005
Ritmo partido, 2008
Ritmo transformado 1, 2009
Sombras y tierras de Israel, 2013
Untitled, 2017
Untitled, 2018