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VIDEO | Highlighting ‘Woodsmen in Wisconsin’ by Richard Lorenz at the Museum of Wisconsin Art

West Bend, Wi – As the Museum of Wisconsin Art in West Bend, WI, takes a brief pause to set up its next exhibit, we will focus on several well-known pieces to help channel some of your favorite MOWA experiences. MOWA Director of Exhibitions Graeme Reid narrates the history of this traditional winter Woodsmen in Wisconsin by artist Richard Lorenz.

Until the early twentieth century, the northern two-thirds of Wisconsin were covered in virgin pine forests.

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The natural bounty gave rise to a logging and lumber industry that employed a quarter of Wisconsin’s labor force to meet the demand for construction materials in burgeoning cities.

At the height of the industry, in 1890, more than 23,000 lumberjacks worked out of nearly 450 remote logging camps to harvest these forests. When the Wisconsin River thawed in spring, laden rafts were piloted downstream to the more than 1,000 sawmills that employed another 32,000 roughnecks to cut the timber.

Murphy & Prachthauser

Emigrating from Germany in 1886, Richard Lorenz came to Milwaukee to help paint the enormous panorama canvases that were in vogue and mostly featured dramatic depictions of Civil War battles.

woodsmen

In his own work Lorenz favorite scenes of everyday life and activities that suggested the vast untamed environment of his new homeland.

The Woodsmen of Wisconsin depicts a group of lumberjacks—tough, hardy men who traveled deep into Wisconsin’s north woods. It was brutally hard work; saws were manually operated, the weather often inhospitable, and the living conditions primitive.

Here, loggers take a break from their work and gather around a fire, eating, conversing, smoking, or silently engaged with their thoughts. The rough-hewn table and make-shift tool sled suggest that this is more than a spontaneous camp, yet standard features of camp life such as the large bunkhouses are out of sight.

Lorenz has instead given us what amounts to a private glimpse into the element of human community in an occupation marked by physical labor and rarely seen by the public.

Lorenz has another painting on display at MOWA: Interior Scene, Home in Milwaukee
Click HERE to see that familiar piece.
According to the brief, Lorenz was working on a sketch after he climbed several feet up a tree. He was warned of the danger. The lumberjacks felled the tree, and the wind took it in the direction of Lorenz who leapt to safety, but not without a mishap.  Click HERE to read the rest of the story.
MOWA will be closed Monday, January 22, 2024 – February 2, 2024, as it prepares its next exhibit.  Click HERE for a preview.  The museum will reopen Saturday, February 3 at 9:30 a.m.

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