A Roadside Meeting: Winter (Primary Title)

Alvan Fisher, American, 1792 - 1863 (Artist)

1815
American
oil on panel
United States
Unframed: 28 5/8 × 39 7/8 in. (72.71 × 101.28 cm)
Framed: 33 1/4 × 44 1/2 in. (84.46 × 113.03 cm)
76.2.2

New Englander Alvan Fisher made the most of the region’s long winters, often painting snowy landscapes. His winter series of 1814-15 is among the first attempts in American art to depict the frigid season. While such imagery has 17th-century Dutch precedents, an 1835 newspaper review praised Fisher for choosing to paint the New England countryside, calling the subject a “truly American” one. The rural simplicity Fisher evokes has since become a touchstone for national nostalgia.

America’s native landscape specialist and an early genre painter, Fisher also produced a number of paintings of the era’s famous racehorses. Examples of these can be seen in the museum’s Paul Mellon sporting art galleries.

Signed and dated at lower center: "A. Fisher Pinxit 1815;" On the mule's pack bag: "A.F."
Gift of the Fellows of the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts
Image released via Creative Commons CC-BY-NC

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