Go West Young Man

I remember as a young man when I first saw the landscape paintings of Albert Bierstadt, I yearned to go west.

And so I have. Many times.

Here is the most important painting of his early career inspired by the Swiss Alps.

Lake Lucerne, 1858
Albert Bierstadt
Overview

Best known for his panoramic views of the Rocky Mountains, Albert Bierstadt began his career as a painter of European landscapes. In 1856, during a period of study abroad, he spent time in Switzerland and completed the plein air sketches he would later use to compose Lake Lucerne, the most important painting of his early career.

In the spring of 1858 he sent the painting to New York for the annual exhibition at the National Academy of Design. The picture caused a sensation. Bierstadt was hailed as a bright new star on the American art stage and was elected an honorary member of the Academy.

Bierstadt’s painting offers a sweeping view of Lake Lucerne with the village of Brunnen in the middle distance and the alpine peaks Ematten, Oberbauen, Uri–Rotstock and St. Gotthard in the distance. Though an image of mountain grandeur, Lake Lucerne also contains numerous pastoral vignettes—a harvest scene near the center, a religious procession at the right, and a camp of Roma people at the left.

One year after completing Lake Lucerne Bierstadt traveled to the Rocky Mountains for the first time. During the decade that followed he produced the western landscapes that brought him his greatest success. These views of the West, so often described as distinctly American, were born of Bierstadt’s experience abroad and frequently duplicate the composition of the first of his large-scale landscapes, Lake Lucerne.

Courtesy of the National Gallery of Art


Grand Tetons, September 2020
blueridgemountain_man

God created a beautiful world for us to enjoy. So get out there and enjoy it!

God’s Future House

The first century Jewish Historian, Josephus, once said: “If you’ve not seen the temple in Jerusalem, you’ve not seen beauty.”

I’m sure it was something else. Had it not been a Jewish temple, it most likely would have been considered one of the Seven Wonders of the Ancient world.

Model of Herod’s Temple
Herod’s Temple at Israel Museum, Jerusalem” by Templar1307 is licensed under CC BY-NC-ND 2.0

Where does God dwell? Where will God dwell?

“But will God indeed reside with mortals on the earth? Even heaven and the highest heaven cannot contain you, much less this house that I have built!

King Solomon – 2 Chronicles 6:18

Then I saw a new heaven and a new earth….And I saw the holy city, the new Jerusalem, coming down out of heaven from God, prepared as a bride adorned for her husband. And I heard a loud voice from the throne saying, “See, the home of God is among mortals. He will dwell with them as their God; they will be his peoples, and God himself will be with them.

John the Seer – Revelation 21:1-3

A Temple Not Made With Human Hands
Arches, National Park

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