Mount Kosciusko, Seen From the Victorian Border (Mount Hope Ranges) by Eugene von Guérard - 1866 - 108.2 × 153.3 cm National Gallery of Victoria Mount Kosciusko, Seen From the Victorian Border (Mount Hope Ranges) by Eugene von Guérard - 1866 - 108.2 × 153.3 cm National Gallery of Victoria

Mount Kosciusko, Seen From the Victorian Border (Mount Hope Ranges)

Oil on canvas • 108.2 × 153.3 cm
  • Eugene von Guérard - 17 November 1811 - 17 April 1901 Eugene von Guérard 1866

Today, we start our special monthly partnership with the National Gallery of Victoria in Melbourne!  We hope you will enjoy it!  :)

The painting we present today is based on drawings made by Eugene von Guérard in 1862 during a scientific expedition to Kunama Namadgi in Ngarigo Country, the mountain now known as Mount Kosciuszko, led by the German scientist, Professor Georg Balthazar von Neumayer.

While this view is serene, journals written during the expedition reveal that the party endured incredible hardships. The dark, eerie, primeval bush and the elevated, light-drenched Mount Kosciuszko form two contrasting regions within the composition of the painting. These two areas are visually linked by tall, majestic gum trees and a flock of cockatoos. High above, in the distance, hawks glide on alpine currents. The skeletal remains of the towering tree trunks frame a section of the center foreground where we see Von Neumayer riding his white horse towards his dog, Hector. Several other horses graze quietly in the bush while Von Neumayer’s traveling companions set up camp for the night. The figures are small details in a scene of sweeping natural grandeur.

While von Guérard’s interest in scientific inquiry is evident in the accurately observed details in the landscape, the dramatic contrasts of scale and light reflect Romantic allusions to the divine and poetic in nature.

I love this beautiful landscape! 

P.S. Do you know which animal painting from NGV collection (one of its highlights) often goes viral on social media? Find out here