Tastemakers, Collectors, and Patrons

Collecting American Art in the Long Nineteenth Century

Linda S Ferber editor Margaret R Laster editor

Format:Hardback

Publisher:Pennsylvania State University Press

Published:21st Feb '24

Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

Tastemakers, Collectors, and Patrons cover

A revelatory history of collecting American art in the long nineteenth century.

Tastemakers, Collectors, and Patrons explores the dynamic landscape of American art collecting in the United States from the late eighteenth through the early twentieth centuries. The geographic range of collecting histories presented in this publication spans the country, including the Eastern Seaboard, the Old South, the Midwest, and the West Coast.

In this volume, the contributing scholars investigate individual collectors and collectives whose missions to create regional and national collecting communities in the United States encouraged civic philanthropy in the fine arts. Key themes—such as the creation of an “American” school distinct from, yet rooted in, European tradition as well as the trials of forming publicly supported museums—reverberate throughout the publication. Essays examine early patrons, collectors, and museum founders; the impact of sectionalism, the Civil War, and reform on American collecting efforts; and the innovative and entrepreneurial spirit of artists, collectors, and dealers at the turn of the century and beyond. Each section foregrounds different issues, underscoring the complexity of the historical, cultural, and political environments in which collections of American art were formed. Together, the volume traces the evolving taste and market for American art in the United States.

In addition to the editors, the contributors include Lynne D. Ambrosini, Sarah Cash, Samantha Deutch, Julie McGinnis Flanagan, Ilene Susan Fort, Barbara Dayer Gallati, Lance Humphries, Elizabeth Mankin Kornhauser, Sophie Lynford, Kimberly Orcutt, and Richard Saunders.

“Beautifully illustrated, Tastemakers, Collectors, and Patrons is an excellent addition to scholarship, enriching the history of US art collecting from the late eighteenth through the early twentieth centuries.”

—Leanne Zalewski Nineteenth-Century Art Worldwide


“The essays serve as an introduction to those curious about how and why Americans began to amass their collections. The authors are thorough in their interaction and analysis of art, and they engage critically in examining the complexities behind the reasons why and how Americans began to collect. The approachable language will be accessible to a wide variety of readers, including art historians, students, avid museum goers, and those who are simply curious about the intersection of American art and identity.”

—Kitty Bell ARLIS/NA Reviews


“This is the kind of useful speculation historians of art collecting in nineteenth- and twentieth-century America need to embrace if they wish to engage historians of other disciplines, rather than continue ploughing their own lonely furrow.”

—Jonathan Conlin Journal of the History of Collections

ISBN: 9780271095240

Dimensions: 254mm x 203mm x 23mm

Weight: 1247g

240 pages