Framed Hudson River School Art
The Hudson River School was not a school of art but, rather a movement of a group of artists in the 19th century that were landscape artists. The framed Hudson River School art have stood with the best in the world of art.
There are many people that have affection for landscape art and find it appealing.
The most famous of the group of Hudson River School art group are artists; Fitz Hugh Lane, Albert Bierstadt, Martin Johnson Heade, Frederic Edwin Church, and Graham Reynolds. There were also several women involved in the group that came from various backgrounds and occupations. The framed Hudson River School paintings not only featured landscapes from the river valley but included the Catskills, Adirondack, and White Mountains of New Hampshire.
Some of the most well known pieces of framed Hudson River School artwork painted by Albert Bierstadt include; “In the Mountains” painted in 1867 and “The Buffalo Trail” painted in the same year. Graham Reynolds has a more simplistic style and produced such great paintings as “Woodland Stream I and II”, “Country Walk I and II”, and “Pollard Window I and II.”
Timothy O’Toole is another Hudson River School group member that produced great paintings titled; “Field in Fall” and “Field in Summer.” Each artist came to the group and the movement with their own ideas of the movement and had been influenced by the romanticism movement in the world of art.