Artwork Details
- Title
- White Sand Bluffs, on Santa Rosa Island, Near Pensacola
- Artist
- Date
- 1834-1835
- Location
- Not on view
- Dimensions
- 19 1⁄2 x 27 1⁄2 in. (49.6 x 69.9 cm)
- Credit Line
- Gift of Mrs. Joseph Harrison, Jr.
- Mediums
- Mediums Description
- oil on canvas
- Classifications
- Subjects
- Landscape — Florida — Pensacola
- Landscape — Florida — Santa Rosa Island
- Landscape — island — Santa Rosa Island
- Landscape — coast
- Indian
- Figure group
- Object Number
- 1985.66.354
Artwork Description
George Catlin painted this scene in the winter of 1834-35, during his visit to Florida. “This sketch,” he later wrote, “was made on Santa Rosa Island, within a few miles of Pensacola . . . The hills of sand are as purely white as snow, and fifty or sixty feet in height, and supporting on their tops, and in their sides, clusters of magnolia bushes---of myrtle---of palmetto and heather, all of which are evergreens, forming the most vivid contrast with the snow-white sand in which they are growing. On the beach a family of Seminole Indians are encamped, catching and drying red fish, their chief article of food.” (Catlin, Letters and Notes, vol. 2, no. 36, 1841, reprint 1973; Truettner, The Natural Man Observed, 1979)