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The Rocky Mountains, Lander's Peak

The Rocky Mountains, Lander's Peak is an 1863 landscape oil painting by the German-American painter Albert Bierstadt. It is based on sketches made during Bierstadt's travels with Frederick W. Lander's Honey Road Survey Party in 1859. The painting shows Lander's Peak in the Wyoming Range of the Rocky Mountains, with an encampment of Native Americans in the foreground. It has been compared to, and exhibited with, The Heart of the Andes by Frederic Edwin Church. Lander's Peak immediately became a critical and popular success and sold in 1865 for $25,000.

The Rocky Mountains, Lander's Peak
ArtistAlbert Bierstadt
Year1863
MediumOil on canvas
Dimensions186.7 cm × 306.7 cm (73.5 in × 120.75 in)
LocationMetropolitan Museum of Art, New York City

Background edit

Hudson River School landscape painter Albert Bierstadt (1830–1902) was born in Germany, and, though his family moved to New Bedford, Massachusetts, when he was two, he spent many of his formative years in Europe.[1] He made his debut in an 1858 exhibition, but his breakthrough came in the aftermath of a journey he made the following year. In the spring of 1859, Bierstadt joined the Honey Road Survey Party led by then-colonel Frederick W. Lander.[2] Bierstadt traveled as far as the Wyoming Range in the Rocky Mountains and made studies for numerous paintings along the way.[3] Bierstadt was greatly impressed by the landscape he encountered and described the Rocky Mountains as "the best material for the artist in the world."[4] Bierstadt habitually extensively prepared for his work, making as many as fifty sketches for a single painting.[5] In 1860, he exhibited Base of the Rocky Mountains, Laramie Peak at the National Academy of Design.[1] His greatest success, however, came with The Rocky Mountains, Lander's Peak, which he exhibited in 1863 at the Tenth Street Studio Building, where he also had a studio.[6]

Composition and theme edit

The painting shows Lander's Peak, a mountain with a summit of 10,456 feet (3,187 m) in the Wyoming Range in modern-day Wyoming. The peak was named after Frederick W. Lander on Bierstadt's initiative, after Lander's death in the Civil War.[7] In one description of the painting, "Sharply pointed granite peaks and fantastically illuminated clouds float above a tranquil, wooded genre scene."[8] The foreground is dominated by the campsite of a tribe of Native Americans. The landscape in the painting is not the actual landscape as it appears at Lander's Peak but rather an ideal landscape based on nature, altered by Bierstadt for dramatic effect.[4]

Bierstadt's painting hit a nerve with contemporary Americans by portraying the grandeur and pristine beauty of the nation's western wilderness. It was a reference to the idea of Manifest Destiny, where the Rocky Mountains represented both natural beauty and an obstacle to westward expansion.[9] In the words of historian Anne F. Hyde: "Bierstadt painted the West as Americans hoped it would be, which made his paintings vastly popular and reinforced the perception of the West as either Europe or sublime Eden."[8] At the same time, the Native Americans in the foreground gave the scene authenticity and presented it as a timeless place, untouched by European hands.[10]

Depiction of Shoshone Peoples edit

Bierstadt paints a band of Shoshone Native peoples at the forefront of the painting.[11] According to a review in Harper's Weekly from March 26, 1864, Lander's Peak "is purely an American scene, and from the faithful and elaborate delineation of the Indian village, a form of life now rapidly disappearing from the earth, may be called a historic landscape."[12] Bierstadt illustrated Shoshone people along with the majestic peaks as a marker of the "sublime" which authors like James Fenimore Cooper, John C. Frémont, and Washington Irving wrote about.[1] Bierstadt does not include who these people are in his painting title. Unlike Catlin, Bierstadt did not focus on the individuality of members of the Shoshone people. Rather, his focus was on their relationship with the landscape. As Bierstadt scholar Matthew Biagell suggests, "He placed them, as he placed European peasants in earlier works, in the middle distance so that we witness their presence in a landscape setting rather than focus on their movements."[13]

In 1859, Eastern Shoshone peoples lived in the region now called Western Wyoming.[14] Bierstadt commented on the Shoshone people he saw in a letter from July 10, 1859, which The Crayon, an art magazine, published in September 1859.[15] "The manners and customs of the Indians are still as they were hundreds of years ago, and now is the time to paint them, for they are rapidly passing away, and soon will be known only in history. I think that the artist ought to tell his portion of their history as well as the writer; a combination of both will assuredly render it more complete"[15] Bierstadt adds, "We have a great many Indian subjects. We were quite fortunate in getting them, the natives not being very willing to have the brass tube pointed at them. Of course they were astonished when we showed them the pictures they did not sit for; and the best we have taken have been obtained without the knowledge of the parties, which is, in fact the best way to take any portrait"[15] The Shoshone people are depicted on a similar level as the nature of the image. Bierstadt is attempting to capture an image of them and the Rockies, something which he believes must be preserved as a part of history.

Reception edit

 
Lander's Peak has often been compared to Frederic Edwin Church's The Heart of the Andes[1]

Lander's Peak was an immediate success; twelve hundred people were invited to the exhibition, and almost a thousand showed up.[6] Bierstadt was a shrewd self-promoter and a gifted artist, and this was the first of his paintings to be widely promoted with a single-picture exhibition accompanied by a pamphlet, engravings, and a tour.[16] The painting, with its ten-foot width, was intended both for exhibition halls and the homes of America's emergent millionaire class.[17] In 1865, British railway entrepreneur James McHenry purchased the work for $25,000,[9] the most paid for an American painting to that point.[18] Bierstadt later repurchased it, and gave or sold it to his brother Edward, before it was eventually acquired for the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York in 1907.[7]

Comparisons were made between Lander's Peak and The Heart of the Andes, a contemporary painting by one of Bierstadt's main rivals in the landscape genre, Frederic Edwin Church.[1] The two works represented the two great mountain ranges spanning North and South America. At the New York Metropolitan Fair in 1864, held by the United States Sanitary Commission to raise money for the Union war effort, the two paintings were exhibited opposite each other.[19] Lander's Peak and The Heart of the Andes are still exhibited on opposite walls at their current location at the Metropolitan.[20]

Most reviews of the painting were positive; one review called it "beyond question one of the finest landscapes ever painted in this country", adding, "Its artistic merits are in some respects unrivaled: and added to these it has the advantage of being a representative painting of a portion of the most sublime and beautiful scenery on the American Continent."[21] The painting won a prize at the Exposition Universelle in Paris in 1867.[9] At the same time, there were also critical voices; in particular, some American Pre-Raphaelites found his brushwork wanting. One such critic complained that it would have been better "if the marks of the brush had, by dexterous handling, been made to stand for scrap and fissure, crag and cranny, but as it is, we have only too little geology and too much bristle."[22]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b c d e Anderson, Nancy. "Bierstadt, Albert". Grove Art Online. Oxford Art Online. Retrieved April 17, 2011.
  2. ^ Hendricks (1964), pp. 333–9.
  3. ^ Hendricks (1964), p. 338.
  4. ^ a b Hine & Faragher (2007), p. 196.
  5. ^ Mayer & Myers (1999), p. 61.
  6. ^ a b Houston & Houston (1999), p. 69.
  7. ^ a b "The Rocky Mountains, Lander's Peak, 1863". metmuseum.org.
  8. ^ a b Hyde (1993), p. 368.
  9. ^ a b c Facos (2011), p. 138.
  10. ^ Miller (2001), pp. 46–7.
  11. ^ McKay, Mary Terence. "For Bierstadt's Eyes Alone". Traditional Fine Arts Organization. Retrieved December 10, 2017.
  12. ^ Nancy K. Anderson; Linda S. Ferber; Helena Wright (1990). Albert Bierstadt: Art & Enterprise (First ed.). New York: Hudson Hills Press/Brooklyn Museum. ISBN 1-55595-059-0. OCLC 21875508.
  13. ^ Biagell, Matthew. "Albert Bierstadt". Traditional Fine Arts Organization. Retrieved December 10, 2017.
  14. ^ "Wyoming Indian Tribes and Languages". www.native-languages.org. Retrieved December 11, 2017.
  15. ^ a b c B.; B. E. N. (1859). "Sketchings". The Crayon. 6 (9): 280–289. doi:10.2307/25527949. JSTOR 25527949.
  16. ^ Wolf (1992), pp. 433–4.
  17. ^ Wolf (1992), p. 434.
  18. ^ Wallach, Alan (2018). "Aestheticizing Tendencies in Hudson River School Landscape Painting at the Beginning of the Gilded Age". In Laster, Margaret R.; Bruner, Chelsea (eds.). New York: Art and Cultural Capital of the Gilded Age. Routledge. ISBN 978-1-351-02756-4.
  19. ^ Miller (2001), p. 46.
  20. ^ Houston & Houston (1999), p. 70.
  21. ^ Houston & Houston (1999), pp. 69–70.
  22. ^ Mayer & Myers (1999), p. 62.

References edit

  • Facos, Michelle (2011). An Introduction to Nineteenth-Century Art. Taylor & Francis. ISBN 978-1-136-84071-5. Retrieved April 29, 2011.
  • Hendricks, Gordon (September 1964). "The First Three Western Journeys of Albert Bierstadt". The Art Bulletin. College Art Association. 46 (3): 333–365. doi:10.1080/00043079.1964.10788767. JSTOR 3048185.(subscription required)
  • Hine, Robert V.; Faragher, John Mack (2007). Frontiers: A Short History of the American West. New Haven, Conn: Yale University Press. ISBN 978-0-300-11710-3. Retrieved April 29, 2011.
  • Houston, Alan Freser; Jourdan Moore Houston (Summer 1999). "The 1859 Lander Expedition Revisited: 'Worthy Relics' Tell New Tales of a Wind River Wagon Road". Montana: The Magazine of Western History. Vol. 49, no. 2. Montana Historical Society. pp. 50–71. JSTOR 4520143.(subscription required)
  • Hyde, Anne F. (August 1993). "Cultural Filters: The Significance of Perception in the History of the American West". The Western Historical Quarterly. Western Historical Quarterly, Utah State University on behalf of The Western History Association. 24 (3): 351–374. doi:10.2307/970755. JSTOR 970755.(subscription required)
  • Mayer, Lance; Gay Myers (Spring 1999). "Bierstadt and Other 19th-Century American Painters in Context". Journal of the American Institute for Conservation. The American Institute for Conservation of Historic & Artistic Works. 38 (1): 55–67. doi:10.1179/019713699806113583. JSTOR 3179838.(subscription required)
  • Miller, Angela (2001). "Albert Bierstadt, Landscape Aesthetics, and the Meanings of the West in the Civil War Era". Art Institute of Chicago Museum Studies. The Art Institute of Chicago. 27 (1): 40–59, 101–02. doi:10.2307/4102838. JSTOR 4102838.(subscription required)
  • Wolf, Bryan J. (September 1992). "Review: How the West Was Hung, Or, When I Hear the Word "Culture" I Take Out My Checkbook (review of The West as America: Reinterpreting Images of the Frontier, 1820–1920 and Albert Bierstadt: Art & Enterprise)". American Quarterly. The Johns Hopkins University Press. 44 (3): 418–438. doi:10.2307/2712983. JSTOR 2712983.(subscription required)

External links edit

  • American Paradise: The World of the Hudson River School, an exhibition catalog from The Metropolitan Museum of Art (fully available online as PDF), which contains material on this painting (see index)
  • The United States of America, a catalog from The Metropolitan Museum of Art Libraries (fully available online as PDF), which contains material on this painting (p. 74–76)

rocky, mountains, lander, peak, 1863, landscape, painting, german, american, painter, albert, bierstadt, based, sketches, made, during, bierstadt, travels, with, frederick, lander, honey, road, survey, party, 1859, painting, shows, lander, peak, wyoming, range. The Rocky Mountains Lander s Peak is an 1863 landscape oil painting by the German American painter Albert Bierstadt It is based on sketches made during Bierstadt s travels with Frederick W Lander s Honey Road Survey Party in 1859 The painting shows Lander s Peak in the Wyoming Range of the Rocky Mountains with an encampment of Native Americans in the foreground It has been compared to and exhibited with The Heart of the Andes by Frederic Edwin Church Lander s Peak immediately became a critical and popular success and sold in 1865 for 25 000 The Rocky Mountains Lander s PeakArtistAlbert BierstadtYear1863MediumOil on canvasDimensions186 7 cm 306 7 cm 73 5 in 120 75 in LocationMetropolitan Museum of Art New York City Contents 1 Background 2 Composition and theme 3 Depiction of Shoshone Peoples 4 Reception 5 See also 6 Notes 7 References 8 External linksBackground editHudson River School landscape painter Albert Bierstadt 1830 1902 was born in Germany and though his family moved to New Bedford Massachusetts when he was two he spent many of his formative years in Europe 1 He made his debut in an 1858 exhibition but his breakthrough came in the aftermath of a journey he made the following year In the spring of 1859 Bierstadt joined the Honey Road Survey Party led by then colonel Frederick W Lander 2 Bierstadt traveled as far as the Wyoming Range in the Rocky Mountains and made studies for numerous paintings along the way 3 Bierstadt was greatly impressed by the landscape he encountered and described the Rocky Mountains as the best material for the artist in the world 4 Bierstadt habitually extensively prepared for his work making as many as fifty sketches for a single painting 5 In 1860 he exhibited Base of the Rocky Mountains Laramie Peak at the National Academy of Design 1 His greatest success however came with The Rocky Mountains Lander s Peak which he exhibited in 1863 at the Tenth Street Studio Building where he also had a studio 6 Composition and theme editThe painting shows Lander s Peak a mountain with a summit of 10 456 feet 3 187 m in the Wyoming Range in modern day Wyoming The peak was named after Frederick W Lander on Bierstadt s initiative after Lander s death in the Civil War 7 In one description of the painting Sharply pointed granite peaks and fantastically illuminated clouds float above a tranquil wooded genre scene 8 The foreground is dominated by the campsite of a tribe of Native Americans The landscape in the painting is not the actual landscape as it appears at Lander s Peak but rather an ideal landscape based on nature altered by Bierstadt for dramatic effect 4 Bierstadt s painting hit a nerve with contemporary Americans by portraying the grandeur and pristine beauty of the nation s western wilderness It was a reference to the idea of Manifest Destiny where the Rocky Mountains represented both natural beauty and an obstacle to westward expansion 9 In the words of historian Anne F Hyde Bierstadt painted the West as Americans hoped it would be which made his paintings vastly popular and reinforced the perception of the West as either Europe or sublime Eden 8 At the same time the Native Americans in the foreground gave the scene authenticity and presented it as a timeless place untouched by European hands 10 Depiction of Shoshone Peoples editBierstadt paints a band of Shoshone Native peoples at the forefront of the painting 11 According to a review in Harper s Weekly from March 26 1864 Lander s Peak is purely an American scene and from the faithful and elaborate delineation of the Indian village a form of life now rapidly disappearing from the earth may be called a historic landscape 12 Bierstadt illustrated Shoshone people along with the majestic peaks as a marker of the sublime which authors like James Fenimore Cooper John C Fremont and Washington Irving wrote about 1 Bierstadt does not include who these people are in his painting title Unlike Catlin Bierstadt did not focus on the individuality of members of the Shoshone people Rather his focus was on their relationship with the landscape As Bierstadt scholar Matthew Biagell suggests He placed them as he placed European peasants in earlier works in the middle distance so that we witness their presence in a landscape setting rather than focus on their movements 13 In 1859 Eastern Shoshone peoples lived in the region now called Western Wyoming 14 Bierstadt commented on the Shoshone people he saw in a letter from July 10 1859 which The Crayon an art magazine published in September 1859 15 The manners and customs of the Indians are still as they were hundreds of years ago and now is the time to paint them for they are rapidly passing away and soon will be known only in history I think that the artist ought to tell his portion of their history as well as the writer a combination of both will assuredly render it more complete 15 Bierstadt adds We have a great many Indian subjects We were quite fortunate in getting them the natives not being very willing to have the brass tube pointed at them Of course they were astonished when we showed them the pictures they did not sit for and the best we have taken have been obtained without the knowledge of the parties which is in fact the best way to take any portrait 15 The Shoshone people are depicted on a similar level as the nature of the image Bierstadt is attempting to capture an image of them and the Rockies something which he believes must be preserved as a part of history Reception edit nbsp Lander s Peak has often been compared to Frederic Edwin Church s The Heart of the Andes 1 Lander s Peak was an immediate success twelve hundred people were invited to the exhibition and almost a thousand showed up 6 Bierstadt was a shrewd self promoter and a gifted artist and this was the first of his paintings to be widely promoted with a single picture exhibition accompanied by a pamphlet engravings and a tour 16 The painting with its ten foot width was intended both for exhibition halls and the homes of America s emergent millionaire class 17 In 1865 British railway entrepreneur James McHenry purchased the work for 25 000 9 the most paid for an American painting to that point 18 Bierstadt later repurchased it and gave or sold it to his brother Edward before it was eventually acquired for the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York in 1907 7 Comparisons were made between Lander s Peak and The Heart of the Andes a contemporary painting by one of Bierstadt s main rivals in the landscape genre Frederic Edwin Church 1 The two works represented the two great mountain ranges spanning North and South America At the New York Metropolitan Fair in 1864 held by the United States Sanitary Commission to raise money for the Union war effort the two paintings were exhibited opposite each other 19 Lander s Peak and The Heart of the Andes are still exhibited on opposite walls at their current location at the Metropolitan 20 Most reviews of the painting were positive one review called it beyond question one of the finest landscapes ever painted in this country adding Its artistic merits are in some respects unrivaled and added to these it has the advantage of being a representative painting of a portion of the most sublime and beautiful scenery on the American Continent 21 The painting won a prize at the Exposition Universelle in Paris in 1867 9 At the same time there were also critical voices in particular some American Pre Raphaelites found his brushwork wanting One such critic complained that it would have been better if the marks of the brush had by dexterous handling been made to stand for scrap and fissure crag and cranny but as it is we have only too little geology and too much bristle 22 See also editList of works by Albert BierstadtNotes edit a b c d e Anderson Nancy Bierstadt Albert Grove Art Online Oxford Art Online Retrieved April 17 2011 Hendricks 1964 pp 333 9 Hendricks 1964 p 338 a b Hine amp Faragher 2007 p 196 Mayer amp Myers 1999 p 61 a b Houston amp Houston 1999 p 69 a b The Rocky Mountains Lander s Peak 1863 metmuseum org a b Hyde 1993 p 368 a b c Facos 2011 p 138 Miller 2001 pp 46 7 McKay Mary Terence For Bierstadt s Eyes Alone Traditional Fine Arts Organization Retrieved December 10 2017 Nancy K Anderson Linda S Ferber Helena Wright 1990 Albert Bierstadt Art amp Enterprise First ed New York Hudson Hills Press Brooklyn Museum ISBN 1 55595 059 0 OCLC 21875508 Biagell Matthew Albert Bierstadt Traditional Fine Arts Organization Retrieved December 10 2017 Wyoming Indian Tribes and Languages www native languages org Retrieved December 11 2017 a b c B B E N 1859 Sketchings The Crayon 6 9 280 289 doi 10 2307 25527949 JSTOR 25527949 Wolf 1992 pp 433 4 Wolf 1992 p 434 Wallach Alan 2018 Aestheticizing Tendencies in Hudson River School Landscape Painting at the Beginning of the Gilded Age In Laster Margaret R Bruner Chelsea eds New York Art and Cultural Capital of the Gilded Age Routledge ISBN 978 1 351 02756 4 Miller 2001 p 46 Houston amp Houston 1999 p 70 Houston amp Houston 1999 pp 69 70 Mayer amp Myers 1999 p 62 References editFacos Michelle 2011 An Introduction to Nineteenth Century Art Taylor amp Francis ISBN 978 1 136 84071 5 Retrieved April 29 2011 Hendricks Gordon September 1964 The First Three Western Journeys of Albert Bierstadt The Art Bulletin College Art Association 46 3 333 365 doi 10 1080 00043079 1964 10788767 JSTOR 3048185 subscription required Hine Robert V Faragher John Mack 2007 Frontiers A Short History of the American West New Haven Conn Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 11710 3 Retrieved April 29 2011 Houston Alan Freser Jourdan Moore Houston Summer 1999 The 1859 Lander Expedition Revisited Worthy Relics Tell New Tales of a Wind River Wagon Road Montana The Magazine of Western History Vol 49 no 2 Montana Historical Society pp 50 71 JSTOR 4520143 subscription required Hyde Anne F August 1993 Cultural Filters The Significance of Perception in the History of the American West The Western Historical Quarterly Western Historical Quarterly Utah State University on behalf of The Western History Association 24 3 351 374 doi 10 2307 970755 JSTOR 970755 subscription required Mayer Lance Gay Myers Spring 1999 Bierstadt and Other 19th Century American Painters in Context Journal of the American Institute for Conservation The American Institute for Conservation of Historic amp Artistic Works 38 1 55 67 doi 10 1179 019713699806113583 JSTOR 3179838 subscription required Miller Angela 2001 Albert Bierstadt Landscape Aesthetics and the Meanings of the West in the Civil War Era Art Institute of Chicago Museum Studies The Art Institute of Chicago 27 1 40 59 101 02 doi 10 2307 4102838 JSTOR 4102838 subscription required Wolf Bryan J September 1992 Review How the West Was Hung Or When I Hear the Word Culture I Take Out My Checkbook review of The West as America Reinterpreting Images of the Frontier 1820 1920 and Albert Bierstadt Art amp Enterprise American Quarterly The Johns Hopkins University Press 44 3 418 438 doi 10 2307 2712983 JSTOR 2712983 subscription required External links editAmerican Paradise The World of the Hudson River School an exhibition catalog from The Metropolitan Museum of Art fully available online as PDF which contains material on this painting see index The United States of America a catalog from The Metropolitan Museum of Art Libraries fully available online as PDF which contains material on this painting p 74 76 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title The Rocky Mountains Lander 27s Peak amp oldid 1186827272, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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