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Cathedral Rocks, Yosemite Valley, Winter

By Albert Bierstadt

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Cathedral Rocks, a Yosemite View is a painting completed by German-American Romanticist Albert Bierstadt around the year 1872. This painting, completed in oil, captures a winter scene from California’s Yosemite Park in the Sierra Nevada region. This painting is blanketed in shades of grey, white blue and brown and highlights the bleak barrenness and naked beauty of winter. The rocks and trees are shown to be jutting out of the ground in every direction here, a limitless source of potential and power from the earth. Bierstadt’s Romantic intention with this piece was to create a vision of a natural escape. The artist’s inclusion of only natural forms with no regard to predisposed conditions or structural technique beyond the looming mass of rock in the middle ground makes this painting unique to the Romantic period. If humans were to be inserted in this painting they would appear miniscule in comparison to the hulking formation taking up the majority of the canvas. Bierstadt’s embrace of this cold California winter mountain scene is meant to act as an escape and as a testament to the artist’s search for landscapes bearing sublime characteristics. This painting is meant to take the common viewer away from the ordinary world of industry and service. It is meant to force them into a world governed by nature and time where the elements are the governing force.

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Cathedral Rocks, Yosemite Valley, Winter

Albert Bierstadt

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About the Artist

Albert Bierstadt (January 8, 1830 – February 18, 1902) was a German-American painter best known for his lush, sweeping landscapes of the American West. In obtaining the subject matter for these works, Bierstadt joined several journeys of the Westward Expansion. Though not the first artist to record these sites, Bierstadt was the foremost painter of these scenes for the remainder of the 19th century.

Bierstadt was part of the Hudson River School, not an institution but rather an informal group of like-minded painters. The Hudson River School style involved carefully detailed paintings with romantic, almost glowing lighting, sometimes called luminism. An important interpreter of the western landscape, Bierstadt, along with Thomas Moran, is also grouped with the Rocky Mountain School.