The Falls of Niagara explained

Year: 1825

The Falls of Niagara is a c.1825 painting by Edward Hicks. It is part of the collection of the Metropolitan Museum of Art.[1]

Although Hicks had personally visited Niagara Falls in 1819 this picture was based on a previous depiction of the Falls by Henry Schenck Tanner on an 1822 map of North America. The view is from the Canadian side and includes traditional North American images of moose, beaver, rattlesnake and eagle. On the wide border of the picture are inscribed extracts from a poem, The Foresters, by Alexander Wilson.

It reads (clockwise from left):

With uproar hideous first the Falls appearThe stunning tumult thundering on the ear.Above, below, where'er the astonished eyeTurns to behold, new opening wonders lie,This great overwhelming work of awful TimeIn all its dread magnificence sublimeRises on our view amid a crashing roarThat bids us kneel, and Times great God adore.

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Edward Hicks - The Falls of Niagara - The Met. 2016-08-31. 2016-08-27. https://web.archive.org/web/20160827062204/http://www.metmuseum.org/art/collection/search/11080. live.