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Source Description

By the time Frederic E. Church executed this study of the Canadian side of Horseshoe Falls, Niagara Falls was already an icon of both American art and the American nation. Tourists and artists flocked to the falls in pursuit of a firsthand experience of the sublime, a sensation of elation and terror that portrayals of Niagara Falls had notorious difficulty reproducing. Church’s celebrated oil painting <em>The Great Fall, Niagara</em> (1857) was one of the few depictions believed to capture the fall’s power in pictorial terms. Like many artists of the Hudson River School, Church used drawings made on site to preserve the visual memory of the place he intended to paint in oil. Cleveland’s sheet was possibly executed during one of the four trips he took to the falls in 1856 to prepare for <em>Niagara. </em>As a night scene, this study in light and shadow is unusual among Church’s drawings. The dark brown paper enhances the image’s nocturnal quality and allowed Church to render the atmospheric effects of mist and clouds. He used white gouache not only as a highlight, but also to define the luminous forms of water and vapor, crafting the landscape’s substance out of negative and positive space. On the picture’s left-hand side, Church represented the man-made Terrapin Tower in shadowy miniature, a testament to his interest in site-specific details—and also, perhaps, a reminder of the diminutive status of human creation in the face of awesome natural forces.

Scholar Source Context

Document identity
localId
148774
label
Niagara Falls by Moonlight
core
obj
dtoType
drawing
pageCount
1
Source metadata
id
148774
contentType
drawing
title
Niagara Falls by Moonlight
description
By the time Frederic E. Church executed this study of the Canadian side of Horseshoe Falls, Niagara Falls was already an icon of both American art and the American nation. Tourists and artists flocked to the falls in pursuit of a firsthand experience of the sublime, a sensation of elation and terror that portrayals of Niagara Falls had notorious difficulty reproducing. Church’s celebrated oil painting <em>The Great Fall, Niagara</em> (1857) was one of the few depictions believed to capture the fall’s power in pictorial terms. Like many artists of the Hudson River School, Church used drawings made on site to preserve the visual memory of the place he intended to paint in oil. Cleveland’s sheet was possibly executed during one of the four trips he took to the falls in 1856 to prepare for <em>Niagara. </em>As a night scene, this study in light and shadow is unusual among Church’s drawings. The dark brown paper enhances the image’s nocturnal quality and allowed Church to render the atmospheric effects of mist and clouds. He used white gouache not only as a highlight, but also to define the luminous forms of water and vapor, crafting the landscape’s substance out of negative and positive space. On the picture’s left-hand side, Church represented the man-made Terrapin Tower in shadowy miniature, a testament to his interest in site-specific details—and also, perhaps, a reminder of the diminutive status of human creation in the face of awesome natural forces.
date
probably 1856
rights
CC0
rightsUri
CC0
language
en
wikidata
Q79929257
creators
2697
genreSpecific
Drawing
imageCount
1
source
import
dimensionsRaw
Sheet: 11.6 x 16.4 cm (4 9/16 x 6 7/16 in.)
cul
America
accession
1976.3
Source extras
tec
graphite and white gouache
tombstone
Niagara Falls by Moonlight, probably 1856. Frederic Edwin Church (American, 1826–1900). Graphite and white gouache; sheet: 11.6 x 16.4 cm (4 9/16 x 6 7/16 in.). The Cleveland Museum of Art, Gift of Robert Arthur Mann, 1976.30
supportMaterials
description
brown wove paper
collection
DR - American 19th Century
inscriptions
inscription
signed?, lower left, in graphite: f. church
didYouKnow
In this drawing, Church manipulates negative space—the space around and between his drawn subjects—to suggest the forms of water and smoke.
citations
citation
Foster, Carter E., "Drawing Power", Cleveland Museum of Art. <em>Cleveland Art: The Cleveland Museum of Art Members Magazine</em>. Vol. 38 no. 04, April 1998
page_number
Mentioned & reproduced: p. 4
creditline
Gift of Robert Arthur Mann
updatedAt
2026-05-29 07:38:28.289000
sourceId
148774
dept
Drawings
coll
DR - American 19th Century
med
graphite and white gouache
creatorTags
male
thumbnail_url
image_url
Single page context
seq
1
pageIndex
0
type
photo
mediaId
941b7412bd222d54