Mount Corcoran

[Click on image for full view]

Mount Corcoran, c. 1876-1877
by Albert Bierstadt
Courtesy of the National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C.
Overview

In 1877 Albert Bierstadt displayed this enormous composite of Sierra Nevada mountain views at a New York City exhibition with the generic title Mountain Lake. The following year, inspired in part by the Corcoran Gallery of Art’s well-publicized purchase of his rival Frederic Edwin Church’s Niagara, Bierstadt offered the work—rechristened Mount Corcoran—to the museum and its founder, William Wilson Corcoran. Staff and board members were deeply suspicious, but Bierstadt presented them with a War Department map showing the mountain’s location. Curator William MacLeod opined that a government official had manually added Corcoran’s name to the document, but it was revealed that the artist had, in fact, named a specific Sierra Nevada peak for the banker (albeit after he had offered him the canvas). Undeterred by the controversy surrounding the painting’s acquisition, the artist stated: “I am happy to have named one of our highest mountains after him, the first to catch the morning sunlight [and] the last to say good night.” 

Bierstadt was the first artist to use his European training to translate field studies into expansive paintings celebrating western American grandeur. Evident everywhere in Mount Corcoran, from the glassy water to the snowy mountain peaks, are the artist’s detailed naturalism and smooth surfaces. Following the discovery of gold in California, the American West became a source of intense fascination for East Coast art patrons and armchair travelers alike who were eager to see images of the vistas enthusiastically described by forty-niners, surveyors, and journalists. In 1859 Bierstadt joined US Army Colonel Frederick W. Lander’s survey party to the Rocky Mountains. Four years later he set his sights on California’s spectacular Yosemite Valley. When he returned to New York following that trip, Bierstadt began producing stunning landscapes such as Mount Corcoranthat introduced eastern audiences to the natural wonders of the West.

More information on this painting can be found in the free PDF of Corcoran Gallery of Art: American Paintings to 1945, available for download at https://www.nga.gov/content/dam/ngaweb/research/publications/pdfs/corcoran-american-art.pdf

Courtesy of the National Gallery of Art

Yosemite Valley & Merced River
by blueridgemountain_man

God made a beautiful world for us to enjoy.

+++

The Song of the Lark

Once heralded by First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt as “America’s Best Loved Picture,” this painting by Jules Adolphe Breton (1884) made the cover of Willa Cather’s novel of the same name.

Many decades later, the sight of a peasant woman in a field at sunrise also inspired a young struggling actor, Bill Murray, to keep moving forward.

[Click for full image]

The Song of the Lark, 1884
Jules Adolphe Breton
CC0 Public Domain Designation
Courtesy of The Art Institute of Chicago

Cover of Willa Cather’s novel, 1915
From the first edition

More about the artist and the painting at The Art Institute of Chicago.

Eurasian Skylark

Get up and go listen.

+++

Buffalo Trail: The Impending Storm

(Click on image for full view)

Buffalo Trail: The Impending Storm, 1869
Albert Bierstadt
Courtesy of The National Gallery of Art

Overview

By 1869, when he created this idyllic view, Albert Bierstadt had made two extensive trips to the American West. He based this lush scene of buffalo peacefully making their way across a river or creek against a roiling sky on views he had sketched during one or both of those expeditions. In a letter he wrote on September 3, 1859 during his excursion with the survey team of US Army Colonel Frederick W. Lander, the artist describes one such scene. He recorded his awe at encountering the majestic buffalo in a passage that could easily describe Buffalo Trail: Impending Storm:

We find here plenty of buffalo. One morning we saw a noble looking animal crossing the river near us, and I alighted from my ambulance and took a position behind a bluff, in order to give him a reception. As he came splashing through the water, I felt half inclined to lay down my rifle and take up my sketchbook, but I was so wrapped in admiration and study I could do neither for a few moments. 

Bierstadt’s meticulous attention to detail and texture, as well as his tightly brushed technique—results of his early training in Düsseldorf, Germany—characterize this bucolic, romantic scene.

Courtesy of the National Gallery of Art


Air Bellows Gap
Blue Ridge Parkway
blueridgemountain_man

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