Symbolism

Magnificent Mountain Landscapes by Ferdinand Hodler

Zuzanna Stańska 19 March 2023 min Read

Ferdinand Hodler was the most influential Swiss artist in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. Hodler’s beautiful mountain landscapes were, in his own words, to bring out “nature’s essential beauty.” Sadly, he saw himself primarily as a figure painter and made his reputation through large, figurative compositions with cosmic symbolic themes that preoccupied many late 19th-century European artists. See Ferdinand Holder’s magnificent vistas of the Swiss Alps!

In the mid to late 19th century, the Swiss landscape was overrun by tourists for the first time, and the country began to experience the full effects of industrial development. Hodler’s landscapes were, in contrast, pristine, without a trace of the Industrial Revolution. The Hodler’s nature is ideal.

For Hodler, landscape painting had a philosophical dimension. The painter’s goal was to reveal the laws of nature and of the world through a patient, structured study of the location.

Ferdinand Hodler, Lake Thun from Leissig, 1904,
Ferdinand Hodler, Lake Thun from Leissig, 1904, Kunstmuseum Bern, Bern, Switzerland. Wikimedia Commons (public domain).
Ferdinand Hodler, The Dent Blanche, 1916,
Ferdinand Hodler, Die Dents Blanches, 1916, private collection. Wikimedia Commons (public domain).
Ferdinand Hodler, Thunersee and Stockhornkette in Winter
Ferdinand Hodler, Thunersee and Stockhornkette in Winter, private collection. Wikimedia Commons (public domain).
Ferdinand Hodler, Lake Thun, Symmetric Reflection, 1905,
Ferdinand Hodler, Lake Thun, Symmetric Reflection, 1905, The Musée d’Art et d’Histoire (Museum of Art and History), Geneva, Switzerland. WikiArt.
Ferdinand Hodler, Le Monch in the Clouds, 1911, private collection.
Ferdinand Hodler, Der Mönch mit Wolken, 1911, Thomas Schmidheiny Collection, Zürich, Swizerland. Wikimedia Commons (public domain).
Ferdinand Hodler, The Dents du Midi from Champéry, 1916,
Ferdinand Hodler, The Dents du Midi from Champéry, 1916, Nestlé Art Collection, Vevey, Switzerland. 
Ferdinand Hodler, Das Lauterbrunner Breithorn, 1911, Kunstmuseum, St. Gallen, Switzerland.
Ferdinand Hodler, Das Lauterbrunner Breithorn, 1911, Kunstmuseum, St. Gallen, Switzerland. Museum’s website
Ferdinand Hodler, La pointe d'Andey, vallée de l'Arve , 1909, Musée d'Orsay, Paris, France.
Ferdinand Hodler, La pointe d’Andey, Vallée de l’Arve, 1909, Musée d’Orsay, Paris, France. Flickr.
Ferdinand Hodler, Thunersee Von Leissigen.
Ferdinand Hodler, Lake Thun Landscape, 1910. Painting Mania.
Ferdinand Hodler, Mount Niesen seen from Heustrich, 1910, Kunstmuseum Basel, Switzerland.
Ferdinand Hodler, Mount Niesen Seen from Heustrich, 1910, Kunstmuseum, Basel, Switzerland. Wikimedia Commons (public domain).

Get your daily dose of art

Click and follow us on Google News to stay updated all the time

Recommended

Symbolism

Want to Hear a Painting? Discover Mikalojus Konstantinas Čiurlionis

Have you ever looked at a painting and could swear that it was about to start moving? As if the frame could continue when you turn away. Have you...

Guest Profile 21 September 2023

Symbolism

Mythological Femmes Fatales in Mysterious Symbolist Paintings

Symbolism developed in the 19th century. It began as a literary movement but quickly moved into other art forms. Symbolist painters rejected the...

Anastasia Manioudaki 19 September 2024

Symbolism

The Erotic Potential of The Temptation of St. Anthony

Christianity has brought many popular topics to art over the centuries, yet the interpretation of a religious motif can drastically change depending...

Guest Profile 11 September 2020

Symbolism

Léon Spilliaert: Symbolism and Longing in His Art

A literary fan of Edgar Allan Poe with a Symbolist approach to painting, Léon Spilliaert thrives in the disenchantment, emotion, and decadence that...

Yasmin Ozkan 21 July 2023