Spring Blossoms, Montclair, New Jersey
George Inness, ca. 1891
About this artwork
George Inness's *Spring Blossoms,clair, New Jersey*ca. 1891) captures the tender renewal of spring in the artist's adopted hometown, just outside New York City. A leading figure in American landscape painting,ness transitioned from the detailed realism of the Hudson River School the atmospheric Tonalism of his later career. Here, blooming trees and soft, hazy vistas evoke a spiritual harmony between nature and the divine, his interest in Swedenborgian philosophy, which emphasized mystical unity in the natural world. The mixed medium of oil with crayon or charcoal on canvas—measuring 29 x 45¼ inches—adds a distinctive texture and immediacy. Inness often used such underpainting techniques to build luminous effects, blending edges to suggest depth and mood rather than precise topography. This approach marked a shift toward impressionistic subtlety in American art, influencing later generations. Now in the Metropolitan Museum of Art's American Wing, gifted in 1911 by George A. Hearn, the painting celebrates the Northeast's seasonal beauty and Inness's mastery in conveying transcendence through everyday landscapes. Visitors will appreciate its serene invitation to pause and ponder nature's quiet poetry.