ShmoopTube
Where Monty Python meets your 10th grade teacher.
Search Thousands of Shmoop Videos
19th-Century Literature Videos 51 videos
How did Scrooge go from being naughty to nice so quickly, and why? (Hint: contrary to popular belief, it has nothing to do with the ghost of Santa...
What would YOU do if the heart of the person you buried under the floorboards started making noise? Only one way to find out... (Note: Shmoop does...
Meet the Lady of Shalott. Not to be confused with the Lady of Shallot, who is frequently in a pickle.
ELA 11: 4.6 The Hudson River School 132 Views
Share It!
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.
Related Videos
They say that honesty is the best policy, but Jack lies about his identity and still gets the girl. Does that mean we should all lie to get what we...
Ever wish you could remember everything that you ever studied? How about everything that everyone has ever studied? Yeah, pretty sure our brains ju...
Ralph Ellison's Invisible Man is an American classic. Hope you're not expecting any exciting shower scenes though. It's not that kind of book.
Do not go gentle into that good night. In fact, if it's past your curfew, don't go at all into that good night. You just stay in your good bed and...