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ELA 11: 4.6 The Hudson River School 133 Views
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Description:
Use this video to defend yourself when your teacher asks why you've drawn the same picture of your cat four different times.
Transcript
- 00:03
Does art bore and/or confuse you? Do you find yourself [Boy looking at paintings yawns.]
- 00:08
wondering how somebody could have paid a million dollars for a pile of shoes
- 00:11
dipped in bronze? Well, maybe you just need something a bit more up your alley. Oh
- 00:16
look, a pretty picture. Yep, you're going to find a lot of those here in the gallery
- 00:20
dedicated to the Hudson River School. As the first school of American art, the
Full Transcript
- 00:25
Hudson River School made American landscapes the "in" thing to paint. But it [Artist paints picture on eazel.]
- 00:29
wasn't just because America had a ton of awe-inspiring scenery. See, the painters of the
- 00:34
Hudson River School were hooked on Transcendentalism. Their art was the
- 00:38
visual embodiment of the American quest for individualism, communion with the
- 00:43
divine, and in-depth experiences with nature... oh, and the basic goodness of man,
- 00:48
beast, and pine tree. Well, the artists of the Hudson River School didn't just [Artist runs away from bear and into a tree.]
- 00:54
paint the scenery of the Hudson River Valley. Later generations of painters in
- 00:58
the school ventured much further afield to places like the maritime provinces of
- 01:02
Canada, the American West, and even South America. Okay, so a few of them might just
- 01:08
have been looking for an excuse to take a vacation down there, but uh... separate story. [Artist lies back on sun lounger.]
- 01:13
One of the most famous painters of the Hudson River School was Albert Bierstadt.
- 01:16
Bierstadt only painted in New York for like, a year. In 1859, he took the
- 01:22
first of many trips to the American frontier, where he painted the Rocky
- 01:26
Mountains and the Sierra Nevadas. Of course, by the time Bierstadt died, the epic [Bierstadt jumps into coffin.]
- 01:31
landscapes of the Hudson River School were totally passé. The American public
- 01:35
had moved on to enjoying the illustrations and sculptures of men like
- 01:39
Frederick Remington, who focused less on the background and more on the cowboys
- 01:44
and Native Americans who were quickly disappearing from the Western scene.
- 01:48
Yeehaw, indeed. Now, you might notice here in our gallery that a lot of the
- 01:53
pictures are of the same landscape. Here's a mountain in the summer, here's
- 01:57
the same mountain in the fall, and the same mountain in winter. Doesn't get [Boy walks along exhibit looking at similar paintings.]
- 02:01
around much, does it? Well, the painters of the Hudson River School liked to capture
- 02:05
the same spot over and over again on canvas but in different seasons, and in [Artist sweats whilst trying to paint quickly.]
- 02:09
different weather, and at different times of day. The idea
- 02:12
was that these changes to the scenery revealed deeper truths about life and death
- 02:16
and nature. It also looked cool and was way easier than coming up with
- 02:21
something new to paint. Next time you find yourself wandering the art museum
- 02:24
looking for a piece of art that makes you feel something other than complete
- 02:27
confusion, boredom, or worse, why not come here to admire the paintings of the
- 02:31
Hudson River School? Nobody else does, so, you know, you'll have the place all [Art gallery with cobwebs and dust on the exhibit.]
- 02:36
to yourself. Yep, you and the crickets.
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