Jul 13, 2006
Jul 13, 2006
Jun 23, 2008

Twilight in the Wilderness

Twilight in the Wilderness

1860

Frederic Edwin Church

(American, 1826–1900)

Oil on canvas

Framed: 124 x 185 x 13 cm (48 13/16 x 72 13/16 x 5 1/8 in.); Unframed: 101.6 x 162.6 cm (40 x 64 in.)

Mr. and Mrs. William H. Marlatt Fund 1965.233

Did you know?

An image of this painting has a cameo in the Harrison Ford film Clear and Present Danger.

Description

In his New York studio, Church painted this spectacular view of a blazing sunset over wilderness near Mount Katahdin in Maine, which he had sketched during a visit nearly two years earlier. Although Church often extolled the grandeur of American landscape in his work, this painting appears to have additional overtones. Created on the eve of the Civil War, the painting's subject can be interpreted as symbolically evoking the coming conflagration. Church's considerable technical skills and clever showmanship contributed to his fame as the premier artist of his generation. Rather than debut this painting in an annual exhibition with works by other artists as was the custom, Church instead exhibited it by itself at a prestigious art gallery. Coaxed by advance publicity and highly favorable press reviews, several hundred spectators flocked to admire it during its seven-week run.

Video

How Does Church Depict Nature?
The Dramatic Sunset
Why Did Church Hold his Own Exhibitions?
Preserving America's Natural Beauty, Then and Now
See also

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