An analysis of Albert Bierstadt's paintings and his contribution to the New Eden image of the soon to be conquered American West.
Term Paper # 101156 |
1,717 words (
approx. 6.9 pages ) |
7 sources |
MLA | 2008
$ 33.95
More information
|
Add to cart
Abstract
This paper discusses Albert Bierstadt's art and describes how his paintings depict the landscapes and environments of the United States West in their most idyllic and archetypal form. The paper describes some of Bierstadt's specific paintings and provides an appendix with copies of the paintings for the reader to view. The paper suggests that Bierstadt held a bombastic mentality as he profited and helped forge the New Eden image of the soon to be conquered American West.
Table of Contents:
Cultivating His Landscapes
Bierstadt's New Eden
Bierstadt as Spokesman for Manifest Destiny
From the Paper
"Bierstadt was a product of his time, a true purveyor of Manifest Destiny and profiteer over the national drive westward. By all accounts, he had no evil intent nor was he a morally bad figure. It is with the aid of historical perspective that we may see how his individual works and success played a role in the paradigm of the American West. His pervasive advertisement of a New Eden was merely one part among many in the schema of mid-19th century American society and politics. Indian Canoe is a testament to the repercussions of zealotry and the dehumanization of those who stand before faith. The weight of all humanity's consciousness is heavier for it."
Tags:depiction, landscape, Indian, manifest, destiny
A discussion on the creative process of art with reference to the art of Albert Bierstadt, Jasper Johns and Christo.
Analytical Essay # 129581 |
750 words (
approx. 3 pages ) |
0 sources |
|
$ 16.95
More information
|
Add to cart
Abstract
This paper disucsses the creative process with reference to the different styles and works of three artists, Albert Bierstadt, Jasper Johns, and Christo. The paper focuses on the idea that the artist fulfills four roles in some degree, by recording the world, by giving tangible form to ideas, by revealing hidden truths, and by helping shape how we see the world.
From the Paper
"As is noted in "The Creative Process," the artist fulfills four roles in some degree, by recording the world, by giving tangible form to ideas, by revealing hidden truths, and by helping shape how we see the world (16). The creative process allows the artist to transform his or her experiences and reactions into a form of communication with others so as to shape their experience along similar lines. The artist may make the transformation of the real into an artistic experience consciously or unconsciously, may understand the process or simply be a tool of the process, may present the experience fully formed for the viewer or may require the participation of the viewer to create the experience at all."
Tags:art, creative, process
Discusses the lives and histories of several early American painters, including John Trumbull, John Blake White, Samuel F. B. Morse, Albert Bierstadt and Winslow Homer.
Essay # 19846 |
2,700 words (
approx. 10.8 pages ) |
4 sources |
1993
|
$ 48.95
More information
|
Add to cart
From the Paper
"John Trumbull:
John Trumbull, a colonel in the Revolutionary War, was the son of a distinguished scholar and governor of the state of Connecticut during the revolution. In the war, Trumbull used his skills as a draftsman by drawing plans of various works in which the army was interested. After his time in the army, Trumbull went to Europe to continue his studies of painting. Beginning in 1783, he studied day and night with Benjamin West in London. Under the tutelage of West and John S. Copley he devoted himself to art as a profession (National Cyclopedia 334).
Later, Trumbull would be considered the painter of the Revolution. In his early works, he painted subjects from Greek and Roman history, but he soon abandoned these in favor of contemporary history. His first such works were "Death of ..."
An examination of the characteristics of art in the Romantic Age.
Essay # 63055 |
847 words (
approx. 3.4 pages ) |
0 sources |
2005
$ 18.95
More information
|
Add to cart
Abstract
Romanticism began in 1789, right after the French Revolution and ended in industrialism around 1810. The Romantic era was a reaction against the neo-classical quest for order and intellectual control in artistic style. This paper examines artwork which focus on nature and the natural world. The paintings examines are Albert Bierstadt's "Lander's Peak", J.M.W. Turner's "The Slave Ship" and Frederic Edwin Church's "Rainy Season in the Tropics." The writer concludes that these paintings show good descriptions on how the Romantic period shows its love of nature.
From the Paper
"The first painting I chose was Albert Bierstadt, "Lander's Peak" (1863). This painting shows beautiful detail of the landscape of the Rocky Mountains. The bottom of the painting shows the Native Americans living, working and feeding off the land. The center of the painting shows the details of the Rocky Mountains with the trees, cliffs, and the waterfalls from the river. Bierstadt even showed the lower cloud lining and the reflection of the sun off the water. The top of the painting shows even more details of the mountains at a distance with light layers of snow and clouds. The painting was drawn together with so much detail it looks like he took a picture of the landscape. He captured a great natural scene because he got the consecrate nature and the people who believed in nature are very important to survive. One thing I can not help to think about is that the painting also symbolizing how the pilgrims push the Native Americans west to take up there lands."
Tags:Albert, Bierstadt, Lander's, Peak, Turner, Slave, Ship, Frederic, Edwin, Church, Rainy, Season, Tropics
Analysis of the painting "Passing Storm over the Sierra Nevadas."
Analytical Essay # 149842 |
1,583 words (
approx. 6.3 pages ) |
2 sources |
MLA | 2012
|
$ 31.95
More information
|
New! Look inside the paper
|
Add to cart
Abstract
This paper provides an analysis of the painting "Passing Storm over the Sierra Nevadas" by Albert Bierstadt from the year 1870. It is located in the American Art section of the San Antonio Museum of Art. According to the paper, this work was chosen for analysis because of the artist's ability to accurately reflect the vivid landscape and his use of light and dark. The paper also notes the balanced composition of the work. Next, the paper describes the form and content of this painting, noting that it is a landscape work and does not have any human forms within it. Additionally, it shows how the work is divided into three relatively uniform and equal shapes, pointing out where these shapes intersect. The paper concludes with a discussion of the artist, Albert Bierstadt and how he was known for his paintings of the American West.
Outline:
Introduction
Form and Content Interpretation
Form
Content
Conclusion
From the Paper
"The lines in the painting are interestingly conceived. The painter uses curved lines to paint the shores and the margins of the lake, as well as parts of the forest. In fact, there seems to be a set of curved, concentric lines, that can be seen as the shore in the lower part of the painting, along with several similar lines on the shore on the sand and continuing into the lake.
"This leads the discussion on the direction of the lines. These are rather horizontal, as one can see from the line of the shore (both the one in the lower part of the painting and the one marking the end of the lake towards the half of the painting are horizontal and almost parallel), as well as from the line of the forest, also parallel to the lines of the shore and horizontal. The horizontal lines tend to emphasize the calmness that follows the storm, a quiet and stable image that followed the bad weather."
Tags:landscape painting, composition, American West
Examines how the United States used art, sculpture and architecture to develop a new identity after the Revolution.
Essay # 25683 |
1,164 words (
approx. 4.7 pages ) |
3 sources |
MLA | 2002
|
$ 24.95
More information
|
Add to cart
Abstract
The success of the American Revolution meant that the former colonists had to take on the difficult job of building a new kind of nation, with a new style of government, based on ideas about freedoms and rights that had never been tried before. The young country wanted to draw on what was best from its European heritage, but also to distinguish itself from Britain's culture which had been the principal cultural model. The paper shows that in the first century, the United States formally and informally used painting, architecture, and sculpture to carry important messages about the nature of American society and to develop styles that were distinctively American. Examples of two works from each of these branches of the arts demonstrate the variety of ways in which the country's art presented American ideals, promoted American self-confidence and developed an American character.
The works discussed are: Gilbert Stuart's painting "Vaughan Portrait" (1795); Thomas Jefferson's architectural design of the Virginia State Capitol Building (1785-99); the statue "Justice" (1824) by sculptor William Rush; Hiram Powers' bust of General Andrew Jackson (1835); Robert Mills' Treasury Building (1836-42) and Albert Bierstadt's painting "The Oregon Trail" (1869).
From the Paper
"Almost as soon as the Revolution ended painters and engravers began to meet an overwhelming demand for portraits of George Washington and other leaders. In addition to being a major symbol of independence, Washington was also painted as the embodiment of "American virtue, restraint, courage, and strength--in short, of American republicanism" (Baigell 27). Gilbert Stuart, an American who trained in England, produced some of the finest and most popular versions in such paintings as George Washington or the Vaughan Portrait (1795). Stuart showed a rather "patrician and remote" Washington, partly because he trained in the aristocratic portrait tradition in England (Baigell 36). But, as Baigell notes, Stuart was a Federalist who did not approve of the growing popularity of Thomas Jefferson and his more democratic ideals. The Vaughan Portrait also reflects, therefore, "the mood of the Federalist hierarchy, fearful of runaway populism . . . and anxious to fix a national image in the minds of Americans to counter endemic localism" (Baigell 36-37)."
Tags:neoclassical, monument, Manifest, Destiny