Not currently on view
In the collection of Art Institute of Chicago, Chicago · as of July 2026
FROM THE ART INSTITUTE OF CHICAGO’S CATALOG
William Bradford devoted the bulk of his career to painting Arctic scenes like The Coast of Labrador . Rendered in minute detail and suffused with light, the artist’s Arctic compositions share stylistic motifs with John Frederick Kensett ’s Luminist views of the Rhode Island coast. Bradford first traveled to Labrador between 1854 and 1857; it was not until 1861, however, that the region became his main source of inspiration. He returned to Labrador repeatedly over the next eight years. Signed and dated 1866, this painting probably derives from a number of sketches he accumulated during an 1865 journey, and it attests to Bradford’s interest in the diverse light effects and rocky landscape of the Arctic.
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Théodore Gudin — View of a Rocky Coast by Moonlight
William Stanley Haseltine (American, 1835–1900) — Capri
Thomas Doughty — Coming Squall (Nahant Beach with a Summer S
Willem Anthonie van Deventer — Seascape near the Coast
Joseph Wright of Derby — The Gulf of Salerno
Martin Johnson Heade — York Harbor, Coast of Maine
Peder Balke — The North Cape by Moonlight
William Trost Richards — The August Moon
George Inness — A Marine
William Bradford (American, 1823–1892) — Labrador Coast
Andreas Achenbach — Sunset after a Storm on the Coast of Sic
Sanford Robinson Gifford (American, 1823–1880) — A Home in t