Paintings of Nature

A LOOK AT

A BRIEF HISTORY OF NATURE PAINTINGS

NATURE AND RELIGION

The connection between man and nature was central to many religions in this area such as Daoism, Confucianism, and Buddhism. Mountains in particular were seen as a stairway to the divine.

ROMANTIC NATURE

Nature played a major role in the ideals of the Romantics; they viewed it as a sublime force that should be both feared and respected. En Plein air painting was very common.

THE MOST FAMOUS PAINTINGS OF NATURE

Monk by the Sea (c. 1808 – 1810)  by Caspar David Friedrich

The Great Wave (1831)  by Katsushika Hokusai

Roseate Spoonbill (1836)  by John James Audubon

The Oxbow (The Connecticut River Near Northampton) (1836)  by Thomas Cole

On the Beach at Trouville (1863)  by Eugène Boudin

Irises (1889)  by Vincent van Gogh

The Japanese Bridge (The Water-Lily Pond) (1899)  by Claude Monet

Mont Sainte – Victoire (c. 1904 – 1906)  by Paul Cézanne

The Flamingoes (1907)  by Henri Rousseau

Wheatfield with crows (1890)  by Vincent van Gogh

The Hay Wain (1821)  by John Constable