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19th Century Landscapes and the Hudson River School

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19th Century Landscapes and the Hudson River School

The Hudson River School was not an actual school but a group of like-minded landscape painters who worked in a similar style from about 1825 to 1865. The growing number of crowded industrial cities in the East gave rise to an appreciation for pictures of the landscape untouched by man. The movement was fueled by the poetry of Ralph Waldo Emerson and by the conviction that God had given the American people an abundance of natural resources as a source of wealth and prosperity.

In summer 1825 Thomas Cole (1801-1848) took his first sketching trip up the Hudson River, an event that would prove momentous for the development of American landscape painting. Cole and such artists as Thomas Doughty (1793-1856) and Asher B. Durand (1796-1886) began to depict the valley's lakes and rocky gorges and the vast forests of the Catskill Mountains. They created works that were intended not only to memorialize the grandeur of the American landscape but also to serve as instruments for spiritual contemplation, as they believed that nature could heal the human spirit. Landscape painting came to dominate the art scene during this period, and the Hudson River School is credited with making landscape a legitimate subject for the canvas and for conveying a sense of place that was uniquely American.

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The Clove, Catskills
Thomas Cole
ca. 1826
Wreck of the Roma
Fitz Hugh (Henry) Lane
1846
West Rock, New Haven
Frederic Edwin Church
1849
Sunday Morning
Asher Brown Durand
1860
Rondout Creek
John Frederick Kensett
1862
Ipswich Marshes
Martin Johnson Heade
1867
Wyant,AlexanderHelwig,Pat O'Donahue's Farm, Kerry,1944.19
Alexander Helwig Wyant
1870
Seal Rock
Albert Bierstadt
c. 1872-87
Sonntag,WilliamLouis,A View in Vermont,1946.01
William Louis Sonntag
c.1874
Blakelock,Ralph Albert,The Encampment,1942.12
Ralph A. Blakelock
1869-1872