Prairie Girl Reading
Early 20th Century Hudson River School Landscape Drawings and Watercolors
Watercolor
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1890s American Impressionist Landscape Paintings
Canvas, Oil
1890s Impressionist Figurative Paintings
Board, Gouache
Late 19th Century Hudson River School Landscape Paintings
Canvas, Oil
17th Century Old Masters Paintings
Oil
1970s American Impressionist Landscape Paintings
Canvas, Oil, Cardboard
1890s Hudson River School Landscape Paintings
Canvas, Oil
19th Century Victorian Landscape Paintings
Oil
1850s Hudson River School Landscape Paintings
Canvas, Oil
Early 1900s Tonalist Landscape Paintings
Canvas, Oil
19th Century Victorian Animal Paintings
Canvas, Oil
Late 19th Century Hudson River School Landscape Paintings
Canvas, Oil
1880s Tonalist Landscape Paintings
Oil, Linen
20th Century American Impressionist Landscape Paintings
Oil, Canvas
Late 19th Century Hudson River School Landscape Paintings
Oil
20th Century American Impressionist Landscape Paintings
Oil, Canvas
Mid-20th Century American Impressionist Landscape Paintings
Oil
Charles Partridge Adams for sale on 1stDibs
A Close Look at hudson-river-school Art
Considered the first major American painting movement, the Hudson River School emerged in the first half of the 19th century with landscape paintings that celebrated the young country’s natural beauty. Most of its leading painters were based in New York City where they exchanged ideas and traveled to the nearby Hudson River Valley and Catskills Mountains to re-create their vistas. At a time when the city was increasingly dense, the Hudson River School artists extolled the vast and pristine qualities of the American landscape, a sentiment that would inform the conservation movement.
American art was dominated by portraiture and historical scenes before Thomas Cole, the founder of the Hudson River School, began painting the Catskill Mountains in 1825. While the Hudson River School was informed by European art aesthetics, particularly the British focus on the sublime in nature, it was a style imbued with nationalism. The landscape painters who followed and studied under Cole would expand their focus from the Northeastern United States to places across the country, their work shared through prints and portfolios promoting an appreciation for the American wilderness — Niagara Falls, the mountain ranges that dot the American West and more — as the style blossomed during the mid-19th century.
Cole’s student Frederic Edwin Church as well as painters such as Albert Bierstadt, John Frederick Kensett, Asher Brown Durand and others became prominent proponents of the Hudson River School. The American art movement also had close ties to the literary world, including to authors like William Cullen Bryant, Henry David Thoreau and James Fenimore Cooper who wrote on similar themes. Although by the early 1900s the style had waned, and modernism would soon guide the following decades of art in the United States, the Hudson River School received renewed interest in the late 20th century for the dramatic way its artists portrayed the world.
Find a collection of authentic Hudson River School paintings, drawings and watercolors and more art on 1stDibs.
Finding the Right landscape-drawings-watercolors for You
Landscape drawings and watercolors show the world through the lenses of different cultures and perspectives. They were also incredibly important for displaying natural scenes before the invention of photography.
There are many ways to effectively arrange art on your walls so that you’re maximizing your wall space. You can introduce peace and serenity within the confines of a living room or bedroom if landscape drawings and watercolors are part of the art that you choose to bring into a space.
Watercolor landscapes have a rich history dating back to ancient China, where they dominated painting genres by the late Tang dynasty. Ink-on-silk paintings in China featured mountains and large bodies of water as far back as the third century. The Netherlands was home to landscapes as a major theme in painting as early as the 1500s, and by the Renaissance, watercolors had made their way to the West and into European culture, becoming a staple of decorative art.
It wasn’t until the Industrial Revolution that watercolor paints became more widely available and embedded in fine arts. Despite their broad distribution today, some artists have chosen to revive the old craft of preparing their own watercolor pigments, paying homage to the medium’s roots.
The variety of brush combinations and painting methods makes watercolor landscapes some of the most stunning pieces in any collection. Find landscape drawings and watercolors on 1stDibs.