American artist Charles Courtney Curran spent summers at the Cragsmoor art colony near Ellenville, New York, where he developed some of his most recognizable images of women placed in sunlit, idealized landscapes. He was already strongly associated with this mountaintop community, and its clear air, dramatic views, and cultivated leisure shaped the mood of paintings like this one. In this 1909 work, a group of women are not shown laboring or narrating a specific story. Instead, they are emblems of calm companionship, modern femininity, and seasonal freedom. Three young women sit side by side on a rocky ledge, shown in left profile against a vast, luminous sky. Their light skin is warmed by sun and flushed softly at the cheeks. Each wears a flowing white summer dress with short puffed sleeves, the fabric catching blue, cream, and peach reflections from the open air. Their hair is pinned up in loose early-20th-century styles. The nearest woman’s dark brown hair is fuller and more shadowed, while the two beyond her have lighter brown and golden tones. Their bodies lean slightly forward in a shared, attentive stillness, hands resting in their laps on the folds of their skirts. Low green plants edge the stone at the bottom of the canvas, but most of the composition is a brilliant blue sky veiled with sweeping white clouds so the women seem suspended between earth and atmosphere. The trio’s placement above the horizon gives them an almost monumental presence, yet the painting remains tender rather than grandiose. Curran’s impressionist-inflected brushwork and radiant sky turn an ordinary pause outdoors into a vision of aspiration with the women literally and symbolically “on the heights,” poised between intimacy and idealization plus earth and atmosphere. The result is both accessible and slightly dreamlike privilege for a celebration of light, youth, and shared presence in nature.
“On the Heights” by Charles Courtney Curran (American) - Oil on canvas / 1909 - Brooklyn Museum (New York) #WomenInArt #CharlesCourtneyCurran #Curran #CharlesCurran #BrooklynMuseum #AmericanImpressionism #art #artText #arte #artwork #BlueskyArt #AmericanArt #AmericanArtist #PortraitofWomen #1900sArt