Williams College Museum of Art Presents
Model American Men
March 1—August
24, 2008
Williamstown, MA—the Williams College Museum of Art (WCMA) presents Model
American Men, an exhibition that explores representations of
male role models and conceptions of masculinity in American culture
from 1850 to 1950. Examining the environment that shaped manhood and
masculinity from the Civil War to the end of World War II, Model
American Men depicts the everyday man to the national hero. The
exhibited works raise awareness about the cultural expectations and
attitudes surrounding these American “models.”
"A hundred years ago," says senior curator Nancy Mowll Mathews, "Americans
believed that they could achieve perfection as modern men and modern
women. We have often examined the rise of feminism and the representation
of the modern woman in this period, but now we get a rare chance to
consider the many facets of the modern man in the progressive era of
the United States."
On view are 30 images of men by artists such as George Bellows, Thomas
Hart Benton, Rube Goldberg, John Singer Sargent, and James Van Der Zee. The
majority of the works are from the permanent collection of the Williams
College Museum of Art, with additional loans from a private collection,
Williams College Archives, and the Chapin Library of Rare Books.
In addition to painting and works on paper are 19th century handbooks
for boys and Williams College archival photography, which highlight
the notion of “Coming of Age” during this time period. As
exemplified by texts such as Advice to Young Men and Boys,
1890, boys matured under the pressure of becoming specific “types” of
men. Concerned with societal values and living in the age of Theodore
Roosevelt’s “Strenuous Life,” these boys looked to
role models to form their own identities. From war heroes to well-dressed
gentlemen, period literature and recent art historical scholarship have
both explored these various role models, which are reflected in this
exhibition through the subcategories of soldiers, farmers, businessmen,
athletes, and artists.
This exhibition is organized by Layla Bermeo and Rebecca Shaykin, Williams
Graduate Students in the History of Art, Class of 2009, with
Nancy Mowll Mathews, Eugénie Prendergast Senior Curator of 19th
and 20th Century Art and Lecturer in Art.
Williams College Museum of Art
The Williams College
Museum of Art is open Tuesday through Saturday,
from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., and on Sunday from 1 to
5 p.m. Admission is free and the museum is wheelchair
accessible. Publicity images for this and other
current exhibitions are available for use by the press. Contact:
Suzanne A. Silitch, Director of Public Relations and External
Affairs, 413.597.3178
Publicity Images
Available
Publicity images for this and other current exhibitions
are available for use. These images are for members of the press
only. Click the thumbnails below for high resolution images and
email Suzanne Silitch,
Director of Public Relations and External Affairs ,
once you have downloaded them. Please be sure to include the
correct credit information in your publication.
|

George Wesley Bellows (American, 1882-1925)
Portrait of a Young
Man, ca. 1906-09
oil on canvas
Museum purchase, Funds from the Bequest
of Joseph Jeffrey Shedd, Class of 1925, Karl E.
Weston Memorial Fund
Courtesy of the Williams College Museum of Art,
(96.28)
|

Thomas Eakins (American, 1844-1916)
Portrait of John Neil Fort,
1898
oil on canvas
Bequest of Lawrence H. Bloedel, Class
of 1923
Courtesy of the Williams College Museum of
Art (77.9.115)
|
|

Samuel Joseph Brown (American, 1907-1994)
Boy in the White Suit,
ca. 1940-41
watercolor on paper
Gift of the artist through the
Pennsylvania W.P.A. Art Project
Courtesy of the Williams
College Museum of Art (PA.10)
|
|
|