Join The Collection to save, track, and explore works like this.

Cleveland Museum of Art

Spotted

Frédéric Auguste Bartholdi — View of the Midwest Plains
Frédéric Auguste Bartholdi

View of the Midwest Plains

1866

French artist Auguste Bartholdi is best known for designing the Statue of Liberty, a gfit from France to the United States in 1886, symbolic of freedom. He also maintained a watercolor practice throughout his career, and created a series of landscapes directly from nature while traveling across the United States in 1871 to identify a potential site for the Statue of Liberty. Here, Bartholdi depicts two figures riding horses before a landscape punctuated by distant buttes, suggesting the freedom he saw as characteristic of the United States.

Medium
watercolor, graphite, ink wash, and gouache on paper

Start the Discussion

Request access to join the discussion

Spotted works by Frédéric Auguste Bartholdi

About this work

Frédéric Auguste Bartholdi, View of the Midwest Plains, 1866

French artist Auguste Bartholdi is best known for designing the Statue of Liberty, a gfit from France to the United States in 1886, symbolic of freedom. He also maintained a watercolor practice throughout his career, and created a series of landscapes directly from nature while traveling across the United States in 1871 to identify a potential site for the Statue of Liberty. Here, Bartholdi depicts two figures riding horses before a landscape punctuated by distant buttes, suggesting the freedom he saw as characteristic of the United States.

Medium
watercolor, graphite, ink wash, and gouache on paper
Year
1866
Seen at
Cleveland Museum of Art, Cleveland, OH

Related themes

Watercolor, Works on Paper, Modern, Drawing, Unique Work

Collected by

Cleveland Museum of Art