
In the Mountains
Winslow Homer·1877
Historical Context
In the Mountains (1877) by Winslow Homer, now in the collection of Brooklyn Museum, represents the artist's engagement with landscape as a vehicle for exploring the relationship between direct observation and pictorial structure, light, and atmosphere. Winslow Homer stands as one of America's greatest naturalistic painters, a largely self-taught artist who developed a powerful visual language for depicting the relationship between human beings and the natural world. From his early Civil War illustrations to his late Maine seascapes, he consistently focused on the drama of survival, labor, and elemental forces.
Technical Analysis
Homer built his watercolors and oils with confident, economical strokes that convey the raw power of sea and weather. His palette in watercolor is bold and direct — deep marine blues, warm ochres, strong greens — applied with remarkable freshness.


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