Archive for posts tagged with ‘Wilderness’


Oct 28 2010

Twilight in the Wilderness by Frederic Edgar Church, 1860

American / Landscape / Paintings (Reproductions) - 1 year ago - troycapc

Twilight in the Wilderness by Frederic Edgar Church, 1860

A reproduction of the masterpiece by Frederic Edgar Church, “Twilight in the Wilderness” of 1860. This quintessentially American work has had many interpreters and is a glorious celebration of the American wilderness. The eagle on the left can be seen as a representation of the American icon of the nation; crossed trees in the work may suggest Christianity. The scruffy and twisted pines may represent the imperfect yet strong elements of the landscape. But the entire work is dominated by blazing red clouds of the sky at dusk, surely a reflection of the bloody storm-clouds threatening Church’s homeland, the Civil War which was to break out in the year following this work’s creation. This work is currently at the Cleveland Museum of Art. Frederic Church was the leading artist of the second generation of the Hudson River School. By the time of this work, he was the most famous contemporary American artist at the age of thirty-four years. He had been a student of Benjamin Cole. As tastes changed after 1865, Church’s popularity with the public began to fade but he continued to paint and was very comfortable due to the significant private wealth of his family. He died in New York City in 1900.

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Jul 27 2010

Elijah in the Wilderness by Frederic, Lord Leighton, 1878

Academician / Inspirational prints / Leighton / Paintings (Reproductions) - 1 year ago - troycapc

Elijah in the Wilderness by Frederic, Lord Leighton, 1878

A reproduction of Lord Frederic Leighton’s “Elijah in the Wilderness” of 1878. This is a depiction of the exile of the prophet Elijah while being persecuted by Queen Jezebel. The prophet sleeps in this painting while an angel of the Lord comes to being him bread and water. The angel’s wings are still expanded creating the impression that he has just silently arrived. The muscled body of the exhausted prophet are in dramatic juxtaposition with the calm stance of the angel who looks down on the prophet in compassion. The original is in the Walker Art Gallery in Liverpool, England.

Frederic Leighton was born in 1830 in Scarborough, England and did not study art until after attending University College School in London. He studied on the continent, notably in the Accademia di Belle Arti in Florence in 1854. He was in Paris between the ages of twenty-five to twenty-nine and there met Ingres, Delacroix, Corot and Millet. He returned to London where he joined the Pre-Raphaelites and began to create sculptures as well as paintings. A great success, he was knighted when aged fifty-eight and was created Baron Leighton in 1896. He died the next day. As a bachelor, he left no children and his home became the Leighton House Museum.

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Jun 24 2010

Elijah in the Wilderness, Frederick, Lord Leighton, 1878

Academician / British / Inspirational prints / Leighton / Paintings (Reproductions) - 1 year ago - troycapc

Elijah in the Wilderness, Frederick, Lord Leighton, 1878

A reproduction of Lord Frederic Leighton’s “Elijah in the Wilderness” of 1878.  This is a depiction of the exile of the prophet Elijah while being persecuted by Queen Jezebel.  The prophet sleeps in this painting while an angel of the Lord comes to being him bread and water.  The angel’s wings are still expanded creating the impression that he has just silently arrived.  The muscled body of the exhausted prophet are in dramatic juxtaposition with the calm stance of the angel who looks down on the prophet in compassion.  The original is in the Walker Art Gallery in Liverpool, England.

Frederic Leighton was born in 1830 in Scarborough, Englnad and did not study art until after attending University College School in London.  He studied on the continent, notably in the Accademia di Belle Arti in Florence in 1854.  He was in Paris between the ages of twenty-five to twenty-nine and there met Ingres, Delacroix, Corot and Millet.  He returned to London where he joined the Pre-Raphaelites and began to create sculputes as well as paintings.  A great success, he was knighted when aged fifty-eight and was created Baron Leighton in 1896.  He died the next day.  As a bachelor, he left no children and his home became the Leighton House Museum.

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Jun 23 2010

Saint John the Baptist in the Wilderness, Caravaggio, 1605

Caravaggio / Inspirational prints / Italian / Paintings (Reproductions) / Renaissance - 1 year ago - troycapc

Saint John the Baptist in the Wilderness, Caravaggio, 1605

This print is from the small altarpiece, one of a handful of original works by Caravaggio in the United States.  It was painted toward the end of the artist’s career in Rome in about 1605.

The conception of the image is itself remarkable, for the Baptist had hardly ever before been portrayed as an isolated, seated figure who lacks, moreover, his usual attributes of halo, lamb and banderole. Stark contrasts of light and dark accentuate the perception that the figure leans forward, out of the deep shadows of the background and into the lighter realm of the viewer’s own space.

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