breaking through the clouds overhead, which suggests a heavenly
consecration of the land. That Bierstadt focused attention on the
West is not insignificant. By calling national attention to the splen-
dor and uniqueness of the regions beyond the Rocky Mountains,
Bierstadt’s paintings reinforced the idea of Manifest Destiny. This
popular 19th-century doctrine held that westward expansion across
the continent was the logical destiny of the United States. As John L.
O’Sullivan (1813–1895) expounded in the earliest known use of the
term in 1845, “Our manifest destiny [is] to overspread the continent
allotted by Providence for the free development of our yearly multi-
plying millions.”^6 Paintings of the scenic splendor of the American
West helped to mute growing concerns about the realities of con-
quest, the displacement of the Native Americans, and the exploita-
tion of the environment. It should come as no surprise that among
those most eager to purchase Bierstadt’s work were mail-service
magnates and railroad builders—the very entrepreneurs and finan-
ciers involved in westward expansion.
FREDERIC CHURCH Another painter usually associated
with the Hudson River School was Frederic Edwin Church
(1826–1900), but his interest in landscape scenes extended beyond
America. During his life he traveled to South America, Mexico,
Europe, the Middle East, Newfoundland, and Labrador. Church’s
paintings are firmly in the idiom of the Romantic sublime, yet they
also reveal contradictions and conflicts in the constructed mythol-
ogy of American providence and character.Twilight in the Wilderness
(FIG. 30-26) presents a panoramic view of the sun setting over the
majestic landscape. Beyond Church’s precise depiction of the awe-
inspiring spectacle of nature, the painting is remarkable for what it
does not depict. Like Constable, Church and the other Hudson River
Romanticism 797
30-25Albert Bierstadt,
Among the Sierra Nevada
Mountains, California,1868.
Oil on canvas, 6 10 .
National Museum of
American Art, Smithsonian
Institution, Washington,
D.C.
Bierstadt’s panoramic land-
scape presents the breath-
taking natural beauty of the
American West. His paintings
reinforced the 19th-century
doctrine of Manifest Destiny,
which justified western
expansion.
30-26Frederic Edwin
Church,Twilight in the
Wilderness,1860s. Oil on
canvas, 3 4 5 4 .
Cleveland Museum of Art,
Cleveland (Mr. and Mrs.
William H. Marlatt Fund,
1965.233).
Church’s paintings eloquently
express the Romantic notion
of the sublime. Painted
during the Civil War, this
wilderness landscape
presents an idealistic view
of America free of conflict.
1 ft.
1 ft.