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Museum Educator-led Programs
Pre & Post Visit Resources

Landscape and Literature: A 19th Century Exploration

Grades 9 - 12

Pre Visit Questionnaire
Scroll down the page to find items on the menu below or click on a link to jump to an item.


Program Description and Frameworks
Program Outline
Key Terms and Concepts
Classroom Activities
Suggested Print and Web Resources
Go to Expressions of Culture Gallery Page


Click here for printable version of all resources listed above




Program Description and Frameworks

19th century American artists, notably the Hudson River School, gave pictorial meaning to a scenery distinctly American-a quiet beauty and an unspoiled heroic wilderness. Explore the pictorial imagination and its intersection with 19th century American literature connecting the written word and works of art.

Location: Expressions of Culture (permanent painting galleries)
Length: One hour
Grades: 9 - 12


Massachusetts
Arts: Connections Strand: Standards 6.7, 7.9, 8.6,8.8,8.9,10.1,10.4,

6.7 Compare examples of works in one arts domain (dance, music, theatre, visual arts, or architecture) from several periods or cultures and explain the extent to which each reflects function, customs, religious beliefs, social philosophies, aesthetic theories, economic conditions, and/or historical or political events.
7.9 Identify artists who have been involved in social and political movements, and describe the significance of selected works.
8.6 Classify works from the United States and world cultures by genre, style, and historical period; explain why the works exemplify a particular genre, style, or period.
8.8 Identify the stylistic features of a given work and explain how they relate to aesthetic tradition and historical or cultural contexts.
8.9 Identify examples of innovation and tradition in the arts, and explain the works in relation to historical and cultural contexts.
10.1 Integrate knowledge of dance, music, theatre, and visual arts and apply the arts to learning other disciplines.
10.4 Continue the above and integrate knowledge from various disciplines and cultural resources.


English Language Arts: Language Strand 1.5, 2.5,2.6; Reading and Literature Strand 9.6, 9.7, 10.5, 10.6, 14.5, 14.6, 15.7

1.5 Identify and practice techniques such as setting time limits for speakers and deadlines for decision-making to improve productivity of group discussions.
2.5 Summarize in a coherent and organized way information and ideas learned from a focused discussion.
2.6 Analyze differences in responses to focused group discussion in an organized and systematic way.
9.6 Relate a literary work to primary source documents of its literary period or historical setting.
9.7 Relate a literary work to the seminal ideas of its time.
10.5 Compare and contrast the presentation of a theme or topic across genres to explain how the selection of genre shapes the message.
10.6 Identify and analyze characteristics of genres (satire, parody, allegory, pastoral) that overlap or cut across the lines of genre classifications such as poetry, prose, drama, short story, essay, and editorial.
14.5 Identify, respond to, and analyze the effects of sound, form, figurative language, graphics, and dramatic structure of poems.
14.6 Analyze and evaluate the appropriateness of diction and imagery.
15.7 Evaluate how an author's choice of words advances the theme or purpose of a work.


History and Social Science; U.S History Strand USI.26, USI.33

USI.26 Describe the causes, course, and consequences of America's westward expansion and its growing diplomatic assertiveness. Use a map of North America to trace America's expansion to the Civil war, including the location of the Oregon Trails.
USI.33 Analyze the emergence of the Transcendentalist movement through the writings of Ralph Emerson and Henry David Thoreau.



New York
English Language Arts Standards 1,2

1 Students will listen, speak, read, and write for information and understanding. As listeners and readers, students will collect data, facts, and ideas; discover relationships, concepts, and generalizations; and use knowledge generated from oral, written, and electronically produced texts. As speakers and writers, they will use oral and written language that follows the accepted conventions of the English language to acquire, interpret, apply, and transmit information.
2 Students will read and listen to oral, written, and electronically produced texts and performances from American and world literature; relate texts and performances to their own lives; and develop an understanding of the diverse social, historical, and cultural dimensions the texts and performances represent. As speakers and writers, students will use oral and written language that follows the accepted conventions of the English language for self-expression and artistic creation.


The Arts Standards 3,4

3 Students will respond critically to a variety of works in the arts, connecting the individual work to other works and to other aspects of human endeavor and thought.
4 Students will develop an understanding of the personal and cultural forces that shape artistic communication and how the arts in turn shape the diverse cultures of past and present society.


Social Studies Standard 1

1 Students will use a variety of intellectual skills to demonstrate their understanding of major ideas, eras, themes, developments, and turning points in the history of the United States and New York.






Program Outline

Introduction: Historic Perspective
An introduction to 19th century culture and politics. Educators will place this program in its historic perspective by briefly discussing the Era of Good Feelings, the War of 1812, Manifest destiny and prominent thinkers and writers of the times.

Entering a Painting
Examine artwork from a new perspective by imagining what it would be like to be a part of a painting. Discuss what you might see, hear, or feel from inside a painting.

Poetry
Focusing on one of the pieces in the Expressions of Culture galleries, students create a poem that the entire group contributes to, using descriptive language based on the mood and style of the paintings.

Classic Literature
Compare poems by Bryant, Emerson, Whitman, Thoreau and other 19th century writers to artwork from the same period.

Conclusion
Each group will present their thoughts about the connections between the literary and art world of the 19th century.




Concepts Covered

American Romanticism


A movement in the visual and literary arts of the nineteenth century encompassing a belief in the natural goodness of humans in a state of nature, that humans would naturally behave well, but are hindered by civilization. Romanticism also embraces the idea that nature is a manifestation of the holy or sublime.

 

Era of Good Feelings

After the end of the War of 1812, Europe and America began a period of peace in which the American government was free to focus on the politics and welfare of its own country instead of international disputes.

 

Expansion Westward

The push to expand American civilization as far west as was possible.

 

Hudson River School

American painters in the 1800's who focused on painting nature in an idealistic way. They were followers of American Romanticism and wanted to use art to show the beauty of nature as they viewed it.

 

War of 1812 In 1812 America declared war on Britain for interference with American shipping and aiding the American Indians. The war ended in 1814 when the Treaty of Ghent was signed.



Key Terms Used During the Program

Transcendentalism




Manifest Destiny



Sublime


Intuition


Landscape
The belief that humans can intuitively transcend the limits of logic and directly receive higher truths and greater knowledge denied to more mundane methods of knowing.

The belief held by many 19th century Americans that is was their God-given responsibility to expand American culture as far into the west as possible.

So awe-inspiringly beautiful as to seem almost heavenly.

Being aware of or knowing something without having physical or logical proof of it.

An expanse of scenery that can be seen with the eye. In art, a landscape is a painting, drawing or photograph of this type of scene, usually a rural one.





Activities: Before and After Your Visit


Berkshire Picture Gallery
Make a drawing or collage of one of your favorite places in the Berkshires. On a separate sheet write about your favorite place, include in your information who you go there with, what is special about the place, and explain what you do when you are there. Include descriptive words about what you see, hear and feel. Using this information, create a fictional short story about this place. Attach your story to your painting/drawing. Make an exhibition in the classroom of everyone's artwork. During your visit to the Museum, see if your favorite place can be found in the Power of Place exhibit.


Travel Diary
Some 19th century artists made visual documents of places they had traveled so that others could see what faraway places looked like. Imagine that you are traveling to the Berkshires for the first time. Make a list of all the places in the Berkshires you would like to visit and the things you would like to do. Write your own travel diary for your 7-day trip to the Berkshire Hills. Your travel diary should include written descriptions, as well as drawings and sketches of the places and sights that you enjoyed the most. For information on Berkshire tourist destination visit See the Berkshires.

American Romanticism
Research American Romanticism, focusing on either the artists or writers of this period. Once you have completed your research create a written or visual art piece that would have fit into the ideals of American Romanticism in the 1800's.

Nature's Symbols
Romantic painters and poets believed even the simplest elements of nature were imbued with meaning. Read stanza 6 of Walt Whitman's Song of Myself, in which the poet explores all of the meaning inherent in a few blades of grass. Then take the class outside and ask students to select one thing in nature and to write down all of the different meanings it could have-- does it remind you of something else, what would it mean to different people, to different animals, to the environment, in different cultures, etc. Then have them use their notes to create a poem in the style of stanza 6, using the refrains "Or I guess it is…" and "It may be…"

Manifest Destiny
As a class, read Walt Whitman's poem Facing West from California's Shores. Then discuss: What does the poem say about the idea of manifest destiny?






Suggested Web and Print Resources
All print resources listed are available through the Central/Western Massachusetts Library System.

Use the Berkshire Athenaeum's on-line catalogue to search for these print resources in Western Massachusetts.


Print Materials For Students

Levin, Nathan and Jim Burke. Walt Whitman: Poetry for Young People. New York: Sterling Publishing. 1997.
This book is an excellent introduction to Walt Whitman's poetry. It contains excerpts from and illustrations of some of his longer poems.

Melvin, Betsy and Tom. Robert Frost's New England. Hanover, NH. University Press of New England, 2000.
Each photograph in this book is a landscape from New England and is accompanied by a poem or verse from Robert Frost.

Thoreau, Henry David. Walden. New York: F. Watts, 1969.
Walden is one of Thoreau's most famous works. This book is a record of his experiment in simple living as he tried to live independently from society on the banks of Walden Pond in Concord Massachusetts.

Whitman, Walt. Leaves of Grass. New York: Paddington Press, 1976.
A collection of Walt Whitman's poems written throughout his life.


Print Materials For Educators

Melvin, Betsy and Tom. Robert Frost's New England. Hanover, NH. University Press of New England, 2000.
Each photograph in this book is a landscape from New England and is accompanied by a poem or verse from Robert Frost.

Thoreau, Henry David. Walden. New York: F. Watts, 1969. Walden is one of Thoreau's most famous works.
This book is a record of his experiment in simple living as he tried to live independently from society on the banks of Walden Pond in Concord Massachusetts.

Whitman, Walt. Leaves of Grass. New York: Paddington Press, 1976.
A collection of Walt Whitman's poems written throughout his life.

Web Materials for Students

See the Berkshires
Learn about different parts of the Berkshires and the places and events that bring people to this unique landscape.

Web Materials for Educators

Smithsonian Education
This Smithsonian website provides teachers with information on landscape paintings and provides lesson plans and additional resources.

The Institute of Museum and Library Services, an independent Federal grant- making agency dedicated to creating and sustaining a nation of learners by helping libraries and museums serve their communities supports the Berkshire Museum.

 

 

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