High Point: Shandaken Mountains 1853 Asher Brown Durand American This work, first shown at the National Academy of Design’s annual exhibition in New York City in 1853, depicts a scene near the town of Olive, New York, where Durand spent the summers of 1853 and 1855. During those months, he repeated sketches he had made of a nearby mountain, High Point (also known as Ashokan High Point), on an earlier visit to the region in 1847. In this painting, in contrast to his large “historical landscapes,” the artist focused on depicting light and shade in the type of bucolic setting popular with an incr


High Point: Shandaken Mountains 1853 Asher Brown Durand American This work, first shown at the National Academy of Design’s annual exhibition in New York City in 1853, depicts a scene near the town of Olive, New York, where Durand spent the summers of 1853 and 1855. During those months, he repeated sketches he had made of a nearby mountain, High Point (also known as Ashokan High Point), on an earlier visit to the region in 1847. In this painting, in contrast to his large “historical landscapes,” the artist focused on depicting light and shade in the type of bucolic setting popular with an increasingly urban American public—represented here by the couple fishing on the bank of the stream, enjoying the bounty of High Point: Shandaken Mountains. Asher Brown Durand (American, Jefferson, New Jersey 1796–1886 Maplewood, New Jersey). American. 1853. Oil on canvas


Size: 2115px × 1431px
Photo credit: © MET/BOT / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No

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