On view

American Art
Wilmerding Pavilion
The Anschutz-Hunt Family Gallery

Mount Adams, Washington,

1875

Albert Bierstadt, 1830–1902; born Solingen, Prussia (Germany); died Irving, NY
y1940-430
Bierstadt enjoyed great success in the years surrounding the Civil War, producing finely detailed vistas of nature’s splendor in majestic canvases that were invested with a significance beyond their surface appearance. The first technically advanced artist to portray the American West, Bierstadt offered—to a rapidly transforming nation—pictures whose spectacular size and fresh, dramatic subject matter supplied visual affirmation of Americans’ perceived exceptionalism. Trained in the highly finished manner of the Düsseldorf Academy, Bierstadt employed a precise style that imbued his works with a reassuring aura of veracity and disguised frequent liberties with geographic reality. Here the exaggerated peak is separated from the arable meadow below by a mist, which seems to move toward the right, drawing the Indigenous figures with it. Bierstadt thus suggests the complicity of nature itself in clearing the way for other white settlers in a pictorial expression of the rhetoric of Manifest Destiny.

More Context

Campus Voices

Handbook Entry

More About This Object

Information

Title
Mount Adams, Washington
Dates

1875

Medium
Oil on canvas
Dimensions
138 x 213 cm. (54 5/16 x 83 7/8 in.) frame: 180 × 255.7 × 15.5 cm (70 7/8 × 100 11/16 × 6 1/8 in.)
Credit Line
Gift of Mrs. Jacob N. Beam
Object Number
y1940-430
Place Depicted

North America, United States, Washington, Mount Adams

Signatures
Signed and dated lower right: A. Bierstadt 1875
Culture
Materials

Possibly in a private collection in Washington (D.C.), by 1872 [1]. Acquired by Mary Prince (1874-1944; also known as Mrs. Jacob Newton Beam and, previously, as Mrs. Willard Humphreys), by 1911; donated to the Princeton University Art Museum, by 1911 [2]. [1] G. Hendricks, Albert Bierstadt, New York 1973, p. 242-243 mentions that although this painting is clearly dated 1875, a work of a similar title and size was in a private collection in Washington, D.C., by 1872. Perhaps this is the same painting, and it was only dated several years after its completion. [2] The Museum’s inventory card mentions that the painting was recorded in an insurance document from that year.