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Small but Sublime: Albert Bierstadt’s Cabinet Paintings and Oil Studies

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Small but Sublime: Albert Bierstadt’s Cabinet Paintings and Oil Studies investigates oil paintings of intimate scale descended in the family of the artist’s wife, Rosalie Osborn. In November 1866, at the pinnacle of his career, Bierstadt married into the Osborn family of Waterville, New York, and the couple would go on to lead a glamorous life together, traveling widely with sojourns in Europe and in California.
Albert Bierstadt (1830-1902), The Heron, undated, signed with the artist's monogram at lower right: AB, oil on panel, 11¾ x 17¾ inches, 29.8 x 45.1 cm
An aerial glow mirrored in still waters creates an actual but still otherworldly environment in The Heron that may suggest celestial associations or invoke the venerable eighteenth-century modes of the beautiful and the sublime. In this intimately scaled painting, the pervasive golden light wields a powerful force uniting terrestrial features into an expression of the visionary. This is not the brilliance of plein-air painting, but rather the radiance of poetic realms. -- Linda S. Ferber, excerpt from "Small but Sublime: Albert Bierstadt Cabinet Paintings and Oil Studies," 2024
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<strong>Albert Bierstadt</strong> (1830-1902), <em>Mountain Scene</em>, undated, oil on paper on board, 13⅛ x 9⅛ inches, 33.3 x 23.2 cm

Albert Bierstadt (1830-1902), Mountain Scene, undated, oil on paper on board, 13⅛ x 9⅛ inches, 33.3 x 23.2 cm


Mountain Scene
’s vertical format cleverly reinforces the impression of vastness and grandeur in this snapshot slice of a mountain lake ringed by very high peaks whose looming reflections darken the distant water surface. Snow fields glitter at their summits over which rise even higher towers of cumulus clouds. The descent of distant snow-fed cascades gleam from across the expanse of water. A shallow foreground is created by the rocky outcrop to which clings a deciduous tree and a conifer, indicating proximity to the timberline nearby; the higher elevations without trees. A solitary boatman tends his craft drawn up on the narrow shore, while, tiny in the distance, a couple row by on the broad expanse of the lake. —Linda S. Ferber, excerpt from "Small but Sublime: Albert Bierstadt Cabinet Paintings and Oil Studies," 2024
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The Osborn family works above, which have never before been exhibited, reveal Albert Bierstadt’s capacity to surprise the viewer with ambitious scenes presented in a jewel-box scale for private interiors.

Small but Sublime: Albert Bierstadt Cabinet Paintings and Oil Studies is on view at the gallery through February 23, 2024.

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