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Charles De Wolf Brownell (1822–1909)

Limestone Cliffs of Bolondrón, Cuba

APG 19785D.001

1860

CHARLES DE WOLF BROWNELL (1822–1909)

CHARLES DE WOLF BROWNELL (1822–1909)
Limestone Cliffs of Bolondrón, Cuba, 1860
Oil on canvas, 41 x 66 in.
Signed and dated (at lower right): C. D. W. Brownell 1860

CHARLES DE WOLF BROWNELL (1822–1909)

CHARLES DE WOLF BROWNELL (1822–1909)
Limestone Cliffs of Bolondrón, Cuba, 1860
Oil on canvas, 41 x 66 in.
Signed and dated (at lower right): C. D. W. Brownell 1860

Description

CHARLES DE WOLF BROWNELL (1822–1909)
Limestone Cliffs of Bolondrón, Cuba, 1860
Oil on canvas, 41 x 66 in.
Signed and dated (at lower right): C. D. W. Brownell 1860

EXHIBITED: Henry Morrison Flagler Museum, Palm Beach, Florida, January 10–April 26, 2010, New World Eden: Artist-Explorers in the American Tropics

RECORDED: Gretel Sarmiento, “Flager Museum’s Tropics Show Intimate, Inviting,” in Palm Beach Arts Paper (February 25, 2010)

EX COLL.: the artist; by descent to his son, Ernest Henry Brownell (1867–1945), Bristol, Rhode Island; and by descent in the family

Limestone Cliffs of Bolondrón, Cuba is one of the largest Cuban landscapes by Brownell to have come to light. The rugged limestone cliffs, situated 25 miles southeast of the port city of Matanzas and 10 miles west of the picturesque town of Jovellanos (named Corral de la Bemba in Brownell’s time), rise to an elevation of over 900 feet, and are nearly as wild today as they were in Brownell’s time. The cliffs’ proximity to the sugar center of Matanzas certainly made them a regular destination to Brownell, who, by the skill with which he depicted the sweeping landscape in this monumental painting, was intimately familiar with the area’s topography, geology, flora, and fauna. Brownell focused on the regions natural characteristics, but in typical fashion, also captured the encroachment of civilization, seen in the right distance in the structures and cultivated fields in the distant valley beyond the lake. In the center foreground, two resting natives—one apparently fast asleep—are being eyed by a large iguana. The region’s cave-riddled limestone cliffs are an important habitat of the Cuban cliff swallow (Petrochelidon fulva cavicola); the mouth of one of the many caves is visible on the face of cliff to the right of the trunk of the dying tree.

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