Preview

Passing Storm

Good Essays
Open Document
Open Document
452 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
Passing Storm
Passing Storm over the Sierra Nevadas is a scenic, oil on canvas that is beautifully displayed at the San Antonio Museum of Art. Albert Bierstadt created the work of art in 1870. Bierstadt was born in Germany in 1830 and at the age of two his family moved to Massachusetts, he soon went back to study in Germany where he developed his art abilities. Many of Albert’s art pieces glorify landscapes vividly on actual places he visited while traveling the American West; his fascination with the landscapes grew and expanded his career.
The Sierra Nevada Mountains are a reflection of the American West and Passing Storm over the Sierra Nevadas work of art illustrates a “photographic-like” image of a lake underneath the Nevada Mountains with a dark storm
…show more content…
His use of atmospheric perspective and linear perspective are used to strengthen the painting, Albert uses this specific style in all his work that seems to really captivate his viewers.
In oil paintings many layers of colors are layered on top of one other and brush strokes are usually visible, but in this particular piece they are barley visible to express a realism of a photo. The landscape is extremely detailed to idealize nature in a painting with imperfections shown in the crooked shaped trees and rough texture of the rocks and shore. Albert’s perspective was designed to draw the viewer in, so the landscape was most likely altered to create an ideal view that wasn’t present in reality.
Albert Bierstadt was able to create a work of art that described the beauty of nature and was able to lure the viewers into experiencing the attraction of the outdoors through a painting. Which also helped America in the 19th century by making a small effort to preserve and conserve the wilderness. During this time there was a growing concern for national forests, parks and wildlife. Viewers were able to admire and experience nature through Bierstadt’s works of art without having to travel a great

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Good Essays

    I believe the bright colors are making a statement to emphasize on the major parts of the artwork. Showing the motion, makes you move your eyes along the imaginary wave. The slight tone of yellow makes me think of the sun come through the wave. The soft light of the off white background makes me think of a light blue sky that is clear of everything. Vague colors made me stare at the picture for long periods of time so that way I could understand why he created this on in particular. I thought maybe like times when he got bored and went to the museum; he created a scene of his bus ride there. Maybe he pictures himself at a beach and what it would be like to sit and watch someone ride a…

    • 640 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    In the painting, Rocky Mountain Landers Peak,the artist Albert Biersladt used elements of art in his painting. I noticed he used value through the color green, its darker and lighter shadings throughout the painting. The artist also showed atmospheric perspective. He created an illusion of distance by reducing color saturation and less detail in the background. He also manipulated warm and cool colors to show more of a hazy atmosphere above the horizon line. Overall the artist, Albert Biersladt painted a beautiful painting he also showed great elements of…

    • 90 Words
    • 1 Page
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    Puesta De Sol 15 Analysis

    • 640 Words
    • 3 Pages

    Diego Rivera’s artwork Puesta de sol 15 (Sunset 15) created in 1959 is a two dimensional painting created by using oil and tempera on cardboard, and is a prime piece that exemplifies my theme of nature through the seasons. This entire art project itself works together as a whole to create my theme, and Sunset 15 works to exemplify nature during the summer season. Sunsets are something typical of the summer season, and while Rivera’s take on a sunset is interesting, and uniquely different, we still get the point of how nature is envisioned during the summer months with the hot summer sun and its intense rays of light. The water is also an aspect of nature of and of summer time that exemplify the theme trying to be conveyed with this artwork.…

    • 640 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Mount Analogue is a vivid, bright and wonderfully detailed traditionally set out interpretation of a real landscape. The artwork is set up in 165 small canvas boards placed together to create a massive scaled artwork (279x571cm.) In the foreground we are positioned on the rocky face of a cliff along with five other hikers painted very small staring out into a massive mountain range stretching very far to a clear horizon line and to a small strip of blue sky. The oil stick and polymer paint used is able to make the white’s brown’s and oranges of the slightly snow covered mountains stand out quite brightly against the dark rocks in the foreground. Shapes, textures and lines of the mountains in this artwork are very realistic through the use of small brushes with detailed and precise strokes, and though Robinson uses the same methods to paint we are given a very different perspective of ‘landscape.’…

    • 1142 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    In The Man to Send Rain Clouds by Leslie Marmon Silko, there are millions of symbols and meanings regardless of how short the story may be. ‘‘The big cotton wood tree stood apart from a small grove of winter-bare cottonwoods which grew in the wide, sandy arroyo. Leon waited under the tree while Ken drove the truck through the deep sand to the edge of the arroyo. But high and northwest the Blue Mountains were still in snow. It was getting colder, and the wind pushed gray dust down the narrow pueblo road. The sun was approaching the long mesa where it disappeared during the winter.'' In this short passage the reader can assume this story takes place in New Mexico because of simple things said such as arroyo and pueblo. It’s a simple choice of words such as these that help the reader better understand the story and its culture.…

    • 435 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    It seems that the Renaissance (1300-1700), methods of presenting the surrounding world in a flat pictorial plane using linear perspective, has dictated the way artists have worked for countless centuries. Linear perspective is a technique used by artists that uses line to create the illusion of depth and space within their work. However this approach is only a representation created using a singular eye. This method of working is suggested to have originated from Leon Battista Alberti’s (1404-1472) metaphor of painting, he proposes that a work of art can be comparable to ‘… an open window through which the subject to be painted is seen’ (1435-6). Alberti’s statement seems to be the explanation to why flat works of art, are repeatedly presented in a rectangle or square shape. Nevertheless something interesting started happening in the twentieth century, a sparse number of individual artists started challenging this manner of working. Since the birth of photography there was no need for art to serve a documentation purpose anymore or to be representational, traditional ways of…

    • 1389 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Better Essays

    Adams’ love for nature was nurtured in the Golden Gate of San Francisco. His life, in his words, was, “coloured and modulated by the great earth gesture of the Yosemite Sierra” (anseladams.com, 2017). One of his early photographs, Bridalveil Fall, was taken in 1927 and captures the beauty of the natural landscape of Yosemite National Park, California. From his first visit to the national park in 1916, Adams was transfixed and transformed,…

    • 1340 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    Part one: the storm

    • 644 Words
    • 3 Pages

    At the headquarters of the Louisiana National Guard, located in the lower 9th ward, the soldiers were not yet aware that the canal levees were giving way. The Guard’s commander was monitoring the situation from Baton Rouge. He was given misleading information.…

    • 644 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    It was the beginning of the 1800 and people wanted to enjoy the beauty of nature, fishing, bird watching and they started looking for places where they could do these things. This time period marks the beginning of the Ecological Conservation movement. This was the movement that recommended the preservation of nature in the country for future generations. During the 1800s multiple people explored the wilderness of America, bringing back extravagant pictures of the lands. A very popular book in 1872, named Picturesque America, had striking engravings of America’s attractive scenery. One of the pictures represented Mirror Lake of Yosemite. Once people started seeing these majestic pictures of the nature, they began to realize the beauty in…

    • 1202 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Adams was the last and defining figure in the romantic tradition of 19th century american landscape painting and photography. He claimed he wasn’t influenced but consciously or unconsciously he was in the tradition of Thomas Cole. Adams subject matter was the magnificent natural beauty of the west! His vast archive of papers, memorabilia, correspondence, negatives…

    • 446 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Ansel Adams

    • 658 Words
    • 3 Pages

    At a young age having trouble fitting in at school, parents Charles Adams and Olive Bray decided Home school tutoring would be best. With No siblings or schoolmates many could understand where his early interest in nature came from. Before discovering his amazing talent in photography he learned to play piano at the age of 12 and began to take lesson after finding out he was fairly proficient. Being the only son of Charles Hitchcock Adams, Ansel's father supported anything his son wanted to pursue in life and after noticing his son’s great interested in nature he bought Ansel a year’s pass to the Panama-Pacific Exposition. Almost every day that year Ansel visited Panama-Pacific Exposition taking pictures with a Brownie box camera and expanding his interest and knowledge in nature and science. After gain much photography skills working for a photo finisher and with his Kodak Box Brownie camera in hand, fourteen year old Ansel finally set out for his much anticipated trip vacation trip to Yosemite with his parents. “That first impression of the valley—white water, azaleas, cool fir caverns, tall pines and stolid oaks, cliffs rising to undreamed-of heights, the poignant sounds and smells of the Sierra…was a culmination of experience so intense as to be almost painful. From that day in 1916 my life has been colored and modulated by the great earth gesture of the Sierra.” wrote Ansel in his…

    • 658 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    -Paintings of storms and ruins that evoked unseen powers –– this is seen in the landscapes of William Constable and J.M.W Turner in England and Caspar David Friedrich in Germany…

    • 512 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    The variation of colors he used created an outstanding display of nature that I never thought possible. I believe his purpose was to create imagery, an illusion to the audience, as if they were looking into the American West, through his painting. The entity of light was the key element of this painting. The form of a fine white line amid a mass of water allowed the separation of the earth and the heavens. What is intriguing about the painting is that as quickly as the earth and heaves were separated, the two joined once again at the same location. The reflection of the lake elaborated on the purity of the water and the richness of life. The contrast of dark and light colors served a great importance in his painting.…

    • 679 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    The photograph I chose to do an analysis on was taken by Ansel Adams and is titled Mirror Lake, Morning, Yosemite National Park. This photograph was taken in 1935, in Yosemite National Park which is located in California. Ansel Adams was born on February 1902, in San Francisco, California. Ansel Adams rose to a prominent photographer of the American West, particularly capturing photos in Yosemite National Park. Ansel Adams used his work to promote conservation of wilderness areas. His iconic black-and-white images helped in establishing photography among the fine arts. The publication of his first portfolio was his professional breakthrough and after its release, he got a number of commercial assignments. Ansel Adams formed the Department of…

    • 1450 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Imants Tillers

    • 2081 Words
    • 9 Pages

    This particular artwork is an appropriation of the rather majestic painting ‘North- East view from the northern top of Mount Kosciusko’ by Eugene von Guerard, produced in 1863. Tillers has re-contextualised the work and given it added value for the present time. ‘Mt Analogue’ explores ideas of authorship and originality through his use of appropriation. He has used one hundred and sixty five canvas board panels jig-sawed together to contrast with von Guerard’s meticulous nineteenth century depiction. Von Guerard’s painting was a result of its time; Von Guerard’s painting is based on sketches he made as part of a scientific expedition to record variations of the earth’s magnetic fields in 1862, and he recorded the new nation through European eyes. Although von Guerard attempted to very accurately portray the features of the new country, he used the techniques and conventions of the time.…

    • 2081 Words
    • 9 Pages
    Powerful Essays