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A Storm in the Rocky Mountains, Mt. Rosalie


Albert Bierstadt was a skilled showman. Here, he reorganized Rocky Mountain landmarks, exaggerated their scale, and introduced dramatic weather to thrill audiences at a moment when the North American continent was under rapid development. Bierstadt’s display for profit of theatrically lit large canvases like this one was a forerunner of today’s movies. In 1863 Bierstadt made on-site studies for the work, which he completed in his New York studio. The painting had a personal significance, for “Mt. Rosalie” (now Mount Evans) was named by the artist in honor of his traveling companion’s wife, Rosalie Osborne Ludlow, whom Bierstadt would marry in 1866 following her divorce.


Title: A Storm in the Rocky Mountains, Mt. Rosalie

Creator: Albert Bierstadt

Date Created: 1866

Museum Location: Brooklyn Museum

Physical Dimension: 210.8 x 361.3 cm

Type: Painting

Medium: Oil on Canvas

Courtesy: Brooklyn Museum

Collection: American Art

Signed: Signed lower right: "ABierstadt / N.Y. 1866"


Credit Line : Dick S. Ramsay Fund, Healy Purchase Fund B, Frank L. Babbott Fund, A. Augustus Healy Fund, Ella C. Woodward Memorial Fund, Carll H. de Silver Fund, Charles Stewart Smith Memorial Fund, Caroline A.L. Pratt Fund, Frederick Loeser Fund, Augustus Graham School of Design Fund, Museum Collection Fund, Special Subscription, and John B. Woodward Memorial Fund; Purchased with funds given by Daniel M. Kelly and Charles Simon; Bequest of Mrs. William T. Brewster, Gift of Mrs. W. Woodward Phelps in memory of her mother and father, Ella M. and John C. Southwick, Gift of Seymour Barnard, Bequest of Laura L. Barnes, Gift of J.A.H. Bell, and Bequest of Mark Finley, by exchange


Exhibitions

· Albert Bierstadt, Art & Enterprise

· American Identities: A New Look

· American Art

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