Cross on Rugged Landscape. Frederic Edwin Church was an American landscape painter born in Hartford, Connecticut.
   He was a central figure in the Hudson River School of American landscape painters, perhaps best known for painting large panoramic landscapes, often depicting mountains, waterfalls, and sunsets, but also sometimes depicting dramatic natural phenomena that he saw during his travels to the Arctic and Central and South America. Church's paintings put an emphasis on light and a romantic respect for natural detail.
   In his later years, Church painted classical Mediterranean and Middle Eastern scenes and cityscapes. Frederic Edwin Church was a direct descendant of Richard Church, who was a Puritan pioneer from England who accompanied Thomas Hooker on the original journey through the wilderness from Massachusetts to what would become Hartford, Connecticut.
   Church was the son of Eliza and Joseph Church. The family's wealth came from Church's father, a silversmith and watchmaker in Hartford, Connecticut.
   Joseph, in turn, was the son of Samuel Church, who founded the first paper mill in Lee, Massachusetts in the Berkshires. Joseph later became an official and a director of The Aetna Life Insurance Company. The family's wealth allowed Frederic Church to pursue his interest in art from a very early age. At eighteen years of age, Church became the pupil of Thomas Cole in Catskill, New York after Daniel Wad
Wikipedia ...