Friday, October 19, 2018

MOUNT STURGEON OR WURGARRI BY EUGENE VON GUERARD

http://wanderingvertexes.blogspot.com

EUGENE VON GUERARD  (1811-1901)
Mount Sturgeon or Wurgarri  (575 m - 1,886 ft) 
Australia (Victoria) 

 In Mount Sturgeon and the Wannon in the Grampians, Victoria 1858, pencil on paper

The mountain 
Mount Wurgarri  (575 m-1,886 ft)  also called Mount Sturgeon is a mountain in Australia located in the Southern Grampians region and the state of Victoria , about 230 kilometers west of the state capital of Melbourne. The width at the base is 2.1 km.  The area around Mount Wurgarri is almost unpopulated, with less than two inhabitants per square kilometer.  In the surroundings around Mount Wurgarri grows mainly savannah forest.  The average annual average is 927 millimeters. The rainy month is July, with an average of 143 mm rainfall , and the driest is February, with 25 mm rainfall.

The painter 
Johann Joseph Eugene von Guerard was an Austrian-born artist, active in Australia from 1852 to 1882. Known for his finely detailed landscapes in the tradition of the Düsseldorf school of painting, he is represented in Australia's major public galleries, and is referred to in the country as Eugene von Guerard. In 1852 von Guerard arrived in Victoria, Australia, determined to try his luck on the Victorian goldfields. As a gold-digger he was not very successful, but he did produce a large number of intimate studies of goldfields life, quite different from the deliberately awe-inspiring landscapes for which he was later to become famous. Realizing that there were opportunities for an artist in Australia, he abandoned the diggings and was soon undertaking commissions recording the dwellings and properties of wealthy pastoralists.
By the early 1860s, von Guerard was recognized as the foremost landscape artist in the colonies, touring Southeast Australia and New Zealand in pursuit of the sublime and the picturesque.  He is most known for the wilderness paintings produced during this time, which are remarkable for their shadowy lighting and fastidious detail.  Indeed, his View of Tower Hill in south-western Victoria was used as a botanical template over a century later when the land, which had been laid waste and polluted by agriculture, was systematically reclaimed, forested with native flora and made a state park. The scientific accuracy of such work has led to a reassessment of von Guerard's approach to wilderness painting, and some historians believe it likely that the landscapist was strongly influenced by the environmental theories of the leading scientist Alexander von Humboldt. Others attribute his 'truthful representation' of nature to the criterion for figure and landscape painting set by the Düsseldorf Academy.

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2018 - Wandering Vertexes...
by Francis Rousseau