
One
of the first artists to use a camera to record
landscape views, Albert Bierstadt also sought
to convey in his paintings the monumental grandeur
of the landscape of the far West. Bierstadt was
born in 1830 in the small town of Solingen, near
Dusseldorf in Germany. His family immigrated to
the United States when he was two years old and
he grew up in New Bedford, Massachusetts. In 1853,
Bierstadt returned to Dusseldorf and studied under
the landscape painters Andreas Aschenbach and
Karl Friedman Lessing. Under the influence of
the Dusseldorf school, Bierstadt learned to develop
the attention for detail and the atmospheric perspective
for which he is so well known.
He
returned to America in 1857 and joined a western
military expedition led by Colonel Frederick W.
Lander to survey wagon routes in the Rocky Mountains
and Wyoming. From sketches, he later painted in
his Tenth Street Studio New York landscapes, Indians,
and wildlife in the traditional style he had learned
in Europe. He was also elected a member of the
National Academy. However, Bierstadt did not forget
the grandeur he saw in the West. Throughout his
lifetime, he traveled back and forth across the
continent, as well as to Europe with his wife
Rosalie.
After
the Civil War, Bierstadt enjoyed his greatest
popularity as a painter of what was then termed
the “unblemished grandeur” of the
western landscape. His reputation introduced him
to many famous people of the time, including the
poet Robert Longfellow, the Grand Duke Alexis
of Russia, and President Rutherford Hayes. In
the 1860s and 70s, Bierstadt earned the highest
prices ever achieved by an American painter, and
the United States Congress allotted $20,000 for
one of his paintings.
In
1867, he had a grand tour of Europe and England,
including a special audience with Queen Victoria.
His painting "Among the Sierra Mountains,
California" was exhibited at the Royal Academy
with mixed reactions, as some thought it overtaxed
the viewers' minds and imaginations. He received
the Chevalier of the Legion of Honor by Napoleon
III and the Order of the Stanislaus from the Czar
of the Russias.
At
this time, Bierstadt was perhaps the most successful
and renowned painter in America, rivaled only
perhaps by Frederic Church. However, by the early
1880s, his fortunes were waning as the art-loving
public turned increasingly towards more modern
modes of expression.
His
oil paintings, many of them huge, were the ultimate
expression of the popular 19th-century Romanticism.
But his reputation diminished when public taste
in art changed dramatically and when transcontinental
railway travel revealed that the West looked nothing
like his idealized paintings. Sadly, Bierstadt
lived long enough to see his romantic, grandiose
and highly detailed paintings of the Western landscape
go out of favor, replaced by more the adventurous
and modern sorts of painting, and he died an all
but forgotten figure.
Reference:
"The American West: Legendary Artists of
the Frontier", edited by Dr. Rick Stewart