
George Inness Giclée Fine Art Prints 1 of 6
1825-1894
American Romanticism Painter
The trajectory of George Inness's artistic development reveals an American painter perpetually in dialogue with European traditions while forging a distinctly personal vision. Born in Newburgh, New York in 1825, the fifth of thirteen children to a farming family, Inness embodied the restless intellectual curiosity that would characterize his entire career. His family's relocation to Newark when he was five placed him within reach of New York's burgeoning art world, though his path to painting was circuitous.
The young Inness apprenticed as a map engraver in the 1840s, first with Sherman & Smith, then with N. Currier - a training that would inform his later compositional precision. His encounter with the French landscape painter Régis François Gignoux proved pivotal, as did his exposure to the National Academy of Design, where he absorbed the lessons of Thomas Cole and Asher Durand. "If these two can be combined, I will try," he later recalled - a statement that encapsulates his synthetic approach to artistic influence.
The 1850s marked a period of intensive European study, funded by patron Ogden Haggerty. In Rome, Inness immersed himself in the work of Claude Lorrain and Nicolas Poussin, while his studio placement above William Page's introduced him to Swedenborgianism - a theological framework that would profoundly shape his mature work. His subsequent encounters with the Barbizon school during Parisian sojourns brought a loosening of brushwork and a deepening tonal palette, transforming him into the foremost American exponent of this atmospheric approach.
Inness's middle period reflects a productive tension between observation and memory, documentation and imagination. His commission from the Delaware, Lackawanna and Western Railroad produced The Lackawanna Valley (c. 1855), a work that negotiates between industrial progress and pastoral tradition with remarkable subtlety. Yet increasingly, Inness worked from visual memory in the studio, pursuing formal considerations over topographical accuracy. His moves from New York to Medfield, Massachusetts (1860), then to Perth Amboy, New Jersey (1864), suggest an artist seeking ideal working conditions while maintaining proximity to metropolitan markets.
The 1870s witnessed Inness at the height of his powers, producing panoramic compositions beneath turbulent skies that balanced precise observation with emotional resonance. His participation in the 1878 Universal Exposition in Paris, coupled with his contributions to the New York Evening Post and Harper's, positioned him as both practitioner and theorist. The 1884 retrospective organized by the American Art Association confirmed his status, while the gold medal at the 1889 Paris Exposition brought international recognition.
Yet it was in Montclair, New Jersey, where Inness settled in 1885, that his most radical experiments unfolded. Swedenborgian concepts of correspondence - the notion that natural phenomena embody spiritual realities - found expression through increasingly abstracted forms, saturated colors, and violent paint handling. This was not the gentle mysticism of the Luminists but something more urgent and personal. His stated belief that "the true use of art is, first, to cultivate the artist's own spiritual nature" did not preclude rigorous technical investigation; he pursued color theory with scientific precision and approached composition mathematically.
Inness's death in 1894 at Bridge of Allan, Scotland, came as he gazed at a sunset, exclaiming "My God! oh, how beautiful!" before collapsing - an end that his contemporaries found poetically appropriate. Neither pure realist nor impressionist, he occupied a transitional space that defies easy categorization. His thousand paintings trace an evolution from Hudson River School precision through Barbizon-influenced atmosphere to a final synthesis that attempted to render "the reality of the unseen." In this pursuit, Inness created a body of work that remains singular in American art - technically accomplished, philosophically complex, and emotionally immediate.
The young Inness apprenticed as a map engraver in the 1840s, first with Sherman & Smith, then with N. Currier - a training that would inform his later compositional precision. His encounter with the French landscape painter Régis François Gignoux proved pivotal, as did his exposure to the National Academy of Design, where he absorbed the lessons of Thomas Cole and Asher Durand. "If these two can be combined, I will try," he later recalled - a statement that encapsulates his synthetic approach to artistic influence.
The 1850s marked a period of intensive European study, funded by patron Ogden Haggerty. In Rome, Inness immersed himself in the work of Claude Lorrain and Nicolas Poussin, while his studio placement above William Page's introduced him to Swedenborgianism - a theological framework that would profoundly shape his mature work. His subsequent encounters with the Barbizon school during Parisian sojourns brought a loosening of brushwork and a deepening tonal palette, transforming him into the foremost American exponent of this atmospheric approach.
Inness's middle period reflects a productive tension between observation and memory, documentation and imagination. His commission from the Delaware, Lackawanna and Western Railroad produced The Lackawanna Valley (c. 1855), a work that negotiates between industrial progress and pastoral tradition with remarkable subtlety. Yet increasingly, Inness worked from visual memory in the studio, pursuing formal considerations over topographical accuracy. His moves from New York to Medfield, Massachusetts (1860), then to Perth Amboy, New Jersey (1864), suggest an artist seeking ideal working conditions while maintaining proximity to metropolitan markets.
The 1870s witnessed Inness at the height of his powers, producing panoramic compositions beneath turbulent skies that balanced precise observation with emotional resonance. His participation in the 1878 Universal Exposition in Paris, coupled with his contributions to the New York Evening Post and Harper's, positioned him as both practitioner and theorist. The 1884 retrospective organized by the American Art Association confirmed his status, while the gold medal at the 1889 Paris Exposition brought international recognition.
Yet it was in Montclair, New Jersey, where Inness settled in 1885, that his most radical experiments unfolded. Swedenborgian concepts of correspondence - the notion that natural phenomena embody spiritual realities - found expression through increasingly abstracted forms, saturated colors, and violent paint handling. This was not the gentle mysticism of the Luminists but something more urgent and personal. His stated belief that "the true use of art is, first, to cultivate the artist's own spiritual nature" did not preclude rigorous technical investigation; he pursued color theory with scientific precision and approached composition mathematically.
Inness's death in 1894 at Bridge of Allan, Scotland, came as he gazed at a sunset, exclaiming "My God! oh, how beautiful!" before collapsing - an end that his contemporaries found poetically appropriate. Neither pure realist nor impressionist, he occupied a transitional space that defies easy categorization. His thousand paintings trace an evolution from Hudson River School precision through Barbizon-influenced atmosphere to a final synthesis that attempted to render "the reality of the unseen." In this pursuit, Inness created a body of work that remains singular in American art - technically accomplished, philosophically complex, and emotionally immediate.
140 George Inness Artworks
Page 1 of 6

Giclée Canvas Print
$70.68
$70.68
SKU: 6868-ING
George Inness
Original Size:50.5 x 60.6 cm
Cleveland Museum of Art, Ohio, USA
George Inness
Original Size:50.5 x 60.6 cm
Cleveland Museum of Art, Ohio, USA

Giclée Canvas Print
$95.86
$95.86
SKU: 9134-ING
George Inness
Original Size:76.2 x 115.2 cm
Art Institute of Chicago, Illinois, USA
George Inness
Original Size:76.2 x 115.2 cm
Art Institute of Chicago, Illinois, USA

Giclée Canvas Print
$91.85
$91.85
SKU: 2684-ING
George Inness
Original Size:76.7 x 114.6 cm
Terra Museum of American Art, Chicago, USA
George Inness
Original Size:76.7 x 114.6 cm
Terra Museum of American Art, Chicago, USA

Giclée Canvas Print
$86.44
$86.44
SKU: 9182-ING
George Inness
Original Size:56 x 91.8 cm
Brooklyn Museum of Art, New York, USA
George Inness
Original Size:56 x 91.8 cm
Brooklyn Museum of Art, New York, USA

Giclée Canvas Print
$62.14
$62.14
SKU: 9174-ING
George Inness
Original Size:56 x 77.5 cm
Cleveland Museum of Art, Ohio, USA
George Inness
Original Size:56 x 77.5 cm
Cleveland Museum of Art, Ohio, USA

Giclée Canvas Print
$58.48
$58.48
SKU: 17560-ING
George Inness
Original Size:73.7 x 91 cm
The Clark Art Institute, Massachusetts, USA
George Inness
Original Size:73.7 x 91 cm
The Clark Art Institute, Massachusetts, USA

Giclée Canvas Print
$57.17
$57.17
SKU: 12244-ING
George Inness
Original Size:76.2 x 113 cm
Corcoran Gallery of Art, Washington, USA
George Inness
Original Size:76.2 x 113 cm
Corcoran Gallery of Art, Washington, USA

Giclée Canvas Print
$93.85
$93.85
SKU: 12245-ING
George Inness
Original Size:65 x 97.8 cm
Smith College Museum of Art, Northampton, USA
George Inness
Original Size:65 x 97.8 cm
Smith College Museum of Art, Northampton, USA

Giclée Canvas Print
$63.85
$63.85
SKU: 17562-ING
George Inness
Original Size:76.8 x 102.6 cm
The Clark Art Institute, Massachusetts, USA
George Inness
Original Size:76.8 x 102.6 cm
The Clark Art Institute, Massachusetts, USA

Giclée Canvas Print
$56.37
$56.37
SKU: 9153-ING
George Inness
Original Size:73.7 x 114.9 cm
Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, USA
George Inness
Original Size:73.7 x 114.9 cm
Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, USA

Giclée Canvas Print
$57.32
$57.32
SKU: 9166-ING
George Inness
Original Size:86 x 127.5 cm
National Gallery of Art, Washington, USA
George Inness
Original Size:86 x 127.5 cm
National Gallery of Art, Washington, USA

Giclée Canvas Print
$108.29
$108.29
SKU: 2686-ING
George Inness
Original Size:107.2 x 82.2 cm
Art Institute of Chicago, Illinois, USA
George Inness
Original Size:107.2 x 82.2 cm
Art Institute of Chicago, Illinois, USA

Giclée Canvas Print
$65.56
$65.56
SKU: 9135-ING
George Inness
Original Size:95.9 x 75.6 cm
Art Institute of Chicago, Illinois, USA
George Inness
Original Size:95.9 x 75.6 cm
Art Institute of Chicago, Illinois, USA

Giclée Canvas Print
$98.26
$98.26
SKU: 9152-ING
George Inness
Original Size:197.2 x 285.4 cm
Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, USA
George Inness
Original Size:197.2 x 285.4 cm
Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, USA

Giclée Canvas Print
$56.37
$56.37
SKU: 9181-ING
George Inness
Original Size:39.3 x 67.3 cm
Cleveland Museum of Art, Ohio, USA
George Inness
Original Size:39.3 x 67.3 cm
Cleveland Museum of Art, Ohio, USA

Giclée Canvas Print
$71.00
$71.00
SKU: 18526-ING
George Inness
Original Size:76.5 x 64.1 cm
Art Institute of Chicago, Illinois, USA
George Inness
Original Size:76.5 x 64.1 cm
Art Institute of Chicago, Illinois, USA

Giclée Canvas Print
$56.37
$56.37
SKU: 2719-ING
George Inness
Original Size:76.2 x 114.3 cm
Cincinnati Art Museum, Ohio, USA
George Inness
Original Size:76.2 x 114.3 cm
Cincinnati Art Museum, Ohio, USA

Giclée Canvas Print
$56.37
$56.37
SKU: 17004-ING
George Inness
Original Size:43 x 67.3 cm
Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, USA
George Inness
Original Size:43 x 67.3 cm
Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, USA

Giclée Canvas Print
$56.37
$56.37
SKU: 2717-ING
George Inness
Original Size:50.7 x 75.9 cm
Los Angeles County Museum of Art, California, USA
George Inness
Original Size:50.7 x 75.9 cm
Los Angeles County Museum of Art, California, USA

Giclée Canvas Print
$93.65
$93.65
SKU: 9169-ING
George Inness
Original Size:90.5 x 138.5 cm
National Gallery, London, UK
George Inness
Original Size:90.5 x 138.5 cm
National Gallery, London, UK

Giclée Canvas Print
$93.85
$93.85
SKU: 9155-ING
George Inness
Original Size:76.2 x 115.6 cm
Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, USA
George Inness
Original Size:76.2 x 115.6 cm
Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, USA

Giclée Canvas Print
$56.70
$56.70
SKU: 9132-ING
George Inness
Original Size:123.8 x 184.5 cm
Art Institute of Chicago, Illinois, USA
George Inness
Original Size:123.8 x 184.5 cm
Art Institute of Chicago, Illinois, USA

Giclée Canvas Print
$78.73
$78.73
SKU: 9129-ING
George Inness
Original Size:45.7 x 61 cm
Private Collection
George Inness
Original Size:45.7 x 61 cm
Private Collection

Giclée Canvas Print
$56.37
$56.37
SKU: 12248-ING
George Inness
Original Size:25.4 x 40.6 cm
Colby College Museum of Art, Maine, USA
George Inness
Original Size:25.4 x 40.6 cm
Colby College Museum of Art, Maine, USA