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Albert Bierstadt Passes Away

Today in Masonic History Albert Bierstadt passes away in 1902.

Albert Bierstadt was a German-born American painter.

Bierstadt was born in Solingen, Germany on January 7th, 1830. In 1831, his family moved from Germany to New Bedford, Massachusetts. From an early age he showed an interest in art and drew clever crayon drawings in his youth. At the age of 21 he began working with oil paints.

In 1853, Bierstadt returned to Germany to study at a school in Düsseldorf at an informal painting school. In 1857 he returned to New Bedford and for a brief time taught painting before turning his attention full time to oil painting.

In 1858, Bierstadt displayed a large painting of Swiss landscape. The painting got him elected into the National Academy of Design, an honorary association of American Artists, in 1860.

After his showing in New York City of the Swiss landscape, Bierstadt began painting landscapes from around New England and Upstate New York, particularly the Hudson Valley.

In 1859, Bierstadt made his first trip west. He returned to his New York City studio with a variety of sketches which became oil paintings of the western United States. He traveled west again in 1863. Through out the 1860's Bierstadt used the resources he collected on his trips to create a variety of oil pairings.

During the American Civil War, Bierstadt paid for a substitute to serve in his place. He also painted one Civil War themed picture called Guerrilla Warfare, Civil War in 1862. It was based on a stereoscopic picture taken by Bierstadt's brother.

In 1871, Bierstadt took a trip to Yellowstone. The paintings he created from his trip inspired the United States Congress to declare Yellowstone a National Park, the first of it's kind in all of the World. One of his large pairings was purchased by Congress for $10,000. Because of this, Bierstadt was sought by every explorer who was heading west to explore new territories. He was also commissioned by three different railroads to travel to the Grand Canyon to gather further subject matter.

Despite the popular success Bierstadt enjoyed, many critics dismissed his paintings as being too much fluff. At least one critic described him as a "vast machinery of advertisement and puffery." He created more than 500 pieces in his lifetime, although many were destroyed when his studio burned in 1882.

By the time of Bierstadt's passing on February 18th, 1902, the taste for epic landscapes had passed and he died largely forgotten. It was not until 1960's when his small oil studies were rediscovered and his art was looked at in a new light.

Bierstadt was a member of Holland Lodge No. 8 in New York City, New York.