On view
Wilmerding Pavilion
The Anschutz-Hunt Family Gallery
Mount Adams, Washington,
1875
More Context
Campus Voices
<p>This painting was made at a time of great change for the American environment, shortly following the completion of the Transcontinental Railroad and around the onset of widespread industrialization. Bierstadt painted, in part, to encourage the migration of East Coast Americans to the West, symbolically shown with Native Americans leaving the majestic scene to make space for white settlers. He also inadvertently captured a time in which ecosystems began to experience dramatic change, including species migration due to shifts in climate, and deforestation spurred by growing numbers of settlers.</p> <p><strong>Catherine Riihimaki</strong>, <em>Associate Director, Science Education, Council on Science and Technology<br></em> <br></p>
Handbook Entry
Like Frederic Church, Albert Bierstadt enjoyed great success in the years surrounding the Civil War, producing finely detailed vistas of nature’s splendor in majestic canvases that were similarly invested with 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 a visual correlative to notions of American exceptionalism, while also contributing to the developing concept of Manifest Destiny. Trained in the highly finished manner of the Düsseldorf Academy, Bierstadt’s precise style imbued his works with a reassuring sense of veracity despite their sublime subjects and occasional liberties with geographic reality. In <em>Mount Adams, Washington</em>, he characteristically combined an impressively scaled natural background with a foreground view of American Indian life, which serves to heighten the picture’s putative realism even as it enhances its exotic appeal. The implied movement of the clouds and the sunlit figures on horseback similarly off to the right seems to open up the depicted space for the viewer to inhabit, providing an apt pictorial metaphor for the actual occupation and exploitation of the West by the eastern interests that constituted the artist’s clientele.
More About This Object
Information
1875
North America, United States, Washington, Mount Adams
- F. J. Mather, "American paintings at Princeton University," Record of the Museum of Historic Art, Princeton University 2, no. 2 (1943): p. 2-15., p. 13
- Barbara T. Ross, "Nineteenth-century American landscape paintings: nine recent acquisitions", Record of the Art Museum, Princeton University 44, no. 1 (1985): p. 4-13., p. 13, fig. 18
- Allen Rosenbaum and Francis F. Jones, Selections from The Art Museum, Princeton University, (Princeton, NJ: The Art Museum, Princeton University, 1986), p. 83
- Princeton University Art Museum: Handbook of the Collection (New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 2007), p. 189 (illus.)
- Princeton University Art Museum: Handbook of the Collections (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Art Museum, 2013), p. 195
-
Encounters: Conflict, Dialogue, Discovery, Princeton University Art Museum (July 14– September 23, 2012)
-
Princeton University Art Museum 10/13/2018–1/6/2019
Peabody Essex Museum 02/02/2019–5/5/2019
Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art 5/25/2019–9/9/2019 -
Object Lessons in American Art: Selections from the Princeton University Art Museum Saturday, February 4, 2023 - Sunday, January 7, 2024