Great Green Hope for the Urban Blues

February 15–August 10, 2025

An oil painting titled Kaaterskill Falls. The painting shows a pink and green landscape with a waterfall.
Lisa Sanditz, Kaaterskill Falls, 2022, oil on canvas, 54 x 42 in. Purchase, gift of Mrs. Frederick Ferris Thompson, by exchange, 2023.17. © Lisa Sanditz

Two hundred years ago, the landscape painter Thomas Cole traveled up the Hudson River to paint the Catskill Mountains, a voyage that marked the mythical origin of the so-called “Hudson River School” of art. In subsequent centuries, artists have continued to portray the Hudson Valley as an earthly paradise remote from the modern world. Artists imagined the region as a promised land of religious freedom, a haven of ethnic identity, an opportunity to reconnect with nature, and a space to experiment with alternative lifestyles. In the words of one New York journalist, the Valley became the “great green hope” for the “urban blues.” At the same time, this enduring pastoral myth cloaks the region’s active ties to urban tourism and trade while obscuring histories of violent settlement, enslaved labor, and resource extraction. Gathering historic and contemporary art in various media, the exhibition invites viewers to explore how the Hudson Valley has been pictured as a place both proximate to the city and its opposite—a “great green hope” as much myth as reality.

Great Green Hope for the Urban Blues kickstarts the Loeb initiative, generously supported by the Terra Foundation for American Art, to reinterpret and reinstall the museum’s significant collection of Hudson River School art.

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