https://openvalley.org/items/browse?tags=Hudson+River+School&output=atom2024-03-28T21:49:01-07:00Omekahttps://openvalley.org/items/show/1408
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var str = 'Storm King on the Hudson';
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var str = 'Picturesque massif on the Hudson River has earned its name due to frequently being mantled with dramatic clouds. This feature made it a favorite subject of 19th-century painters. Colman's composition is quite complex, however, since it renders both primeval nature and a rapidly industrializing American--taking the form of rafted steamboats spewing smoke.';
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]]>2019-06-18T15:18:06-07:00
]]>https://openvalley.org/items/show/1399
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var str = 'Harbor Island, Lake George, NY';
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var str = 'David Johnson was a second-generation school of the Hudson River School who studied with Jasper Francis Cropsey and was friends with his contemporaries John Frederick Kensett and John William Casilear. This is one of several paintings Johnson made of Lack George, which was a popular subject due to its spectacular setting, constantly changing weather, and relative ease of access. Here, we are looking through a narrow passage between the Harbor Islands towards the Tongue Mountain Range, specifically Brown Mountain and its distinctive cliffs. A light rain falls upon the water, from a squall either approaching or having passed.';
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]]>2019-06-10T11:33:48-07:00
]]>https://openvalley.org/items/show/1395
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var str = 'Summer Day on Conesus Lake';
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var str = 'A placid scene along the shore of this Finger Lake depicts men and women—there are no children present—at their leisure in genteel dress. Small groups are picnicking, lounging, boating, and perhaps courting.
Kensett, a second-generation painter in the Hudson River School tradition, still evokes beautiful landscapes but with a more modulated emotion than the sublime work of his predecessors. Moreover, many of the notable visual effects here point to humans in the landscape. A beam of light illuminates the white dress of one woman at center left; other points of light in the trees imply other small dramas. At right along the opposite shore there is the hint of a sailboat. And in the background a ray of light cuts across the lake.
';
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]]>2019-06-08T14:02:57-07:00
]]>https://openvalley.org/items/show/1387
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var str = 'Autumn on the Delaware';
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var str = 'We pause during a still moment, seemingly at dawn or dusk, as seven deer come to the Delaware River for water. Its placid surface and enclosure on all sides organizes the space; through a gap in the trees we behold mountains in the distance. Whittredge usually is grouped with other Hudson River School painters, and we see some characteristic techniques in this work: a vision of nature untouched by humans, fallen trees and snags to contrast his more scenic elements.';
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]]>2019-06-04T09:32:58-07:00
Dublin Core
Title
Description
Creator
Whittredge, Thomas Worthington, 1820-1910
Date
Contributor
Source
Private collection, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. [With]Hirschl & Adler Galleries, Inc., New York, Acquired by the present owner from the above, 1990.