Not currently on view
In the collection of Cleveland Museum of Art, Cleveland · as of July 2026
FROM THE CLEVELAND MUSEUM OF ART’S CATALOG
Thomas Moran is especially well known for his sweeping views of remote areas in the American West. A gifted watercolorist who was deeply influenced by J. M. W. Turner, Moran found a realistic equivalent for the Englishman’s art in the strange hues of the mountains of Wyoming and Nevada, the bubbling springs and vaporous geysers of Yellowstone, and the fantastic rock formations of Arizona. Although he enjoyed dramatic effects, Moran did not exaggerate the spectacular landscapes of the American West; watercolors such as Ruby Range are accurate even in their surprising palettes, achieving an almost visionary intensity.
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Paul Huet — Mountains of Auvergne
August Heinrich — The Watzmann seen from the North-East, and
Frank Randal|John Ruskin — Mountainous Landscape in Italy :
Muirhead Bone (British, 1876–1953) — Parnassus
David Roberts (Scottish, 1796–1864) — Gebil Hor. Mount Hor,
Carl Wagner — Foggy Landscape in the Apennine; verso: Sketch
Eugène-Emmanuel Viollet-le-Duc — Mont Blanc Seen from the Ma
Joseph Mallord William Turner — View in the St. Gotthard Pas
Edward Lear — Agia Paraskevi, Epirus, Greece
Adrien Dauzats — Gezicht bij Roquebrune, Fréjus
Paul Huet — Mountain View at Oisans (Isère)
Thomas Miles Richardson, the younger — Glen Rossie