This article relies largely or entirely on a
single source. (November 2021) |
Alaskan Coast Range | |
---|---|
Artist | Albert Bierstadt |
Year | 1889 |
Medium | Oil on paper |
Movement | Hudson River School |
Subject | Alaskan coastline |
Dimensions | 35.2 cm × 49.2 cm (13 7/8 in × 19 3/8 in) |
Location | Smithsonian American Art Museum, Washington, D.C. |
Alaskan Coast Range is an 1889 landscape painting by the German American painter Albert Bierstadt that presently hangs in the Smithsonian American Art Museum. While traveling through British Columbia, Bierstadt took a steamship to Alaska in search of more rugged landscapes. He ended up shipwrecked in Loring, Alaska. While sheltering in a nearby Native American settlement, he drew his littoral Alaskan surroundings; this work is most likely an oil sketch made for further detailing. [1]
This article relies largely or entirely on a
single source. (November 2021) |
Alaskan Coast Range | |
---|---|
Artist | Albert Bierstadt |
Year | 1889 |
Medium | Oil on paper |
Movement | Hudson River School |
Subject | Alaskan coastline |
Dimensions | 35.2 cm × 49.2 cm (13 7/8 in × 19 3/8 in) |
Location | Smithsonian American Art Museum, Washington, D.C. |
Alaskan Coast Range is an 1889 landscape painting by the German American painter Albert Bierstadt that presently hangs in the Smithsonian American Art Museum. While traveling through British Columbia, Bierstadt took a steamship to Alaska in search of more rugged landscapes. He ended up shipwrecked in Loring, Alaska. While sheltering in a nearby Native American settlement, he drew his littoral Alaskan surroundings; this work is most likely an oil sketch made for further detailing. [1]