Mount Hood (painting) explained

Mount Hood
Artist:Albert Bierstadt
Metric Unit:cm
Imperial Unit:51 in x 60 1/4 in
Museum:Portland Art Museum
City:Portland, Oregon, U.S.

Mount Hood is an 1869 painting by the German-American painter Albert Bierstadt, and part of the collection of the Portland Art Museum in Portland, Oregon, in the United States.[1] It portrays a view of the mountain in Oregon with the same name.

To Bierstadt, communicating the metaphor of the monumentality of the American West was more important than making the painting geographically accurate. As a result, many features of the painting were modified from the real landscape, such as the exaggerated height Mount Hood and different landscape components that could not all be viewed at the same time in a single place along the Columbia River Gorge. An example of this is that the view of the mountain face seen in the picture is as it would be seen from Portland, but the landscape is painted as if the viewer was looking from Multnomah Falls and the northern shore of the Columbia River.[2]

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Mount Hood. Portland Art Museum. April 23, 2017. April 24, 2017. https://web.archive.org/web/20170424174638/http://portlandartmuseum.us/mwebcgi/mweb.exe?request=record;id=11260;type=101. live.
  2. The Portland Art Museum . 2020 . Sign accompanying the painting . . 2020-03-09 . 2020-03-09 . https://web.archive.org/web/20200309033254/http://portlandartmuseum.us/mwebcgi/mweb.exe?request=record;id=11260;type=101 . live .