Sunday Morning in the Mines

Painting

-

anonymous...

Name/Title

Sunday Morning in the Mines

Entry/Object ID

1872.381

Type of Painting

Easel

Artwork Details

Medium

Oil on canvas, Oil, Canvas

Category

American Art, 1800 to 1945

Acquisition

Accession

1872.381

Acquisition Method

Gift

Credit Line

Crocker Art Museum, E. B. Crocker Collection

Notes

Crocker Art Museum, E. B. Crocker Collection

Made/Created

Artist

Charles Christian Nahl

Date made

1872

Time Period

19th Century

Place

State/Province

California

Country

United States

Continent

North America

Lexicon

Legacy Lexicon

Object Name

Web-Tag-California Artists, Web-Tag-Animals

Dimensions

Height

72 in

Width

108 in

Location

Category

Display

Category

Display

Category

Display

Interpretative Labels

Label Type

Website Medium

Label

Oil on canvas

General Notes

Note Type

Historical Note

Note

Charles Christian Nahl was a German who became a prolific painter and lithographer of the California Gold Rush. He enjoyed the patronage of prominent citizens in San Francisco and Sacramento for his portraits and genre scenes. Nahl, a native of Kassel, showed early promise and received his earliest training from his father, an etcher and engraver, along with instruction from a cousin known for painting portraits and historical scenes. He also attended the academy in Kassel. Family turmoil motivated him to move to Paris in 1846, where he continued his studies with Horace Vernet and Paul Delaroche. There, he exhibited in the 1847 and 1848 Paris Salons. In 1849, Nahl, his family, and their friend, August Wenderoth, sailed for New York and settled in Brooklyn. Lured by the prospect of gold, the group left for California in 1851. After failing to strike it rich, Nahl returned to art, first in Sacramento and then San Francisco. While he excelled at portraiture, many of the genre scenes for which he is today best remembered were painted in the final decade of his life. The artist succumbed to typhoid fever in 1878. Five major works were commissioned by the Crockers in the late 1860s and 1870s: "Sunday Morning in the Mines," "The Fandango," "The Love Chase," "The Patriotic Race," and the tripartite series "The Romans and the Sabines." "Sunday Morning in the Mines," the best-known painting of these commissions, has become emblematic of the Gold Rush era. An allegory painted in 1872, the scene is based on a lettersheet illustration that the artist created in the early 1850s. The right side of the painting depicts the Sunday morning activities of virtuous miners, and the left depicts the irresponsible pursuits of the morally corrupt.