The Hudson River School was an artistic movement initiated by a group of American Romantic landscape painters in the mid-19th century. It is called the "Hudson River School" because the main works of the school depicted the Hudson Valley and its surrounding landscapes, and the second generation of Hudson River painters began to expand to New England, the Canadian maritime provinces, the western United States, and South America. Under the American cultural and artistic system, all industries and fields have completely released and stimulated the potential of human beings, and most of the famous painters and sculptors are not graduates of school, but are born naturally and self-taught. Until then, no one knew they were artistic geniuses, including themselves.
The American painter Albert Bierstadt (1830-1902), born in Germany, was one of the painters of the "Hudson River School". Many of his works are western American landscapes: because he received funding to travel to the west to paint. In other words, many of the works here are western American scenery, not limited to the Hudson River area of New York State. Biztatt traveled to the Western United States to create, especially the scenery of the Pacific Coast.
Landscape. Made in 1867-1869.
Among the Sierra Nevada Mountains, California, 1868.
Looking Down Yosemite Valley, California, was written in 1865 and is now a national park in the United States
A Storm in the Rocky Mountains, 1866.
Sierra Nevada, 1866. It is now in the collection of the Reynolda House Museum of American Art in North Carolina.
Autumn Woods, 1886.
In Tropical Scenery and Fishing Boats in the Bay, only Florida and southern California have such scenery in the United States, but the original work does not indicate where it is.
《山中》(In the Mountains)。
Storm in the Mountains, 1870.
Pacific Coast, Puget Sound, 1886.
Gates of the Yosemite, 1882.
Sunset in the Yosemite Valley, 1868.
Storm in the Rocky Mountains, 1866. It is now in the Brooklyn Museum.