Skip to main content
A vertical landscape with a red-roofed chalet tucked in a lush canopy of trees below a mountain…
Mountain Peak
A vertical landscape with a red-roofed chalet tucked in a lush canopy of trees below a mountain…
A vertical landscape with a red-roofed chalet tucked in a lush canopy of trees below a mountain peak.
Mountain Peak, Paul Besnard, c. 1895, oil on canvas, Telfair Museum of Art, Savannah, Georgia.

Mountain Peak

Artist (French, 1849 - 1934)
Datec. 1895
MediumOil on canvas
DimensionsCanvas: 122 1/4 × 28 1/4 inches (310.5 × 71.8 cm)
Framed: 125 7/8 × 30 3/4 × 1 9/16 inches (319.7 × 78.1 × 4 cm)
Credit LineGift of Beatrice Hood Stroup.
Object number1984.3.2
On View
Not on view
CopyrightThe images and text contained on this page are owned by Telfair Museums or used by the Museum with permission from the owners. Unauthorized reproduction, transmission or display of these materials is prohibited with the exception of items deemed “fair use” as defined by U.S. and international copyright laws.Label TextThese extraordinary panels originally decorated the salon of Siegfried Bing’s L’Art Nouveau gallery in Paris. Dedicated to modern taste, the gallery contained a series of rooms decorated by contemporary artists. Paul Albert Besnard was commissioned to decorate the circular salon, which ultimately included eleven painted wall panels as well as an illusionistic ceiling panel. Besnard’s panels display the emphasis on nature and organic design that characterizes the Art Nouveau movement. The human presence is dwarfed by the awesome scale of the mountains, which tower majestically above the viewer. Besnard’s rich palette and loose painting technique lend a mystical, otherworldly quality to the works. The son of artists, at age 17 Besnard entered the studio of famed academic artist Alexandre Cabanel at the prestigious Ecole des Beaux-Arts, and sent his first painting to the Salon two years later. In 1874, Besnard won the prestigious Prix de Rome. A producer of both easel paintings and large murals, Besnard became director of the Ecole des Beaux-Arts late in life. The Telfair’s panels were acquired by the museum’s Fine Arts Advisor, Gari Melchers, in 1910. At the time, Melchers reported in a letter to the Telfair’s
Subject MatterHaute-Savoie, France
A vertical landscape of a waterfall loosely rendered between two high cliffs with a sliver of c…
Paul Albert Besnard
c. 1895
Two horses drink from a lake on the bottom right in a vertical landscape dominated by a mountai…
Paul Albert Besnard
c. 1895
A landscape with a small green hill at the right along the gray-colored road on which an adult …
Chauncey Foster Ryder
c. 1910 - 1916
Self Portrait
Paul Goadby Stone
1949
An oil painting of geometric or Cubist forms to create an image of a large ship docked in a har…
Jon Paul Thomas
1948
A hillside with a wooden log fence in the foreground, beyond which lie a field, a forest, and a…
Luigi Lucioni
c. 1945
An oil portrait of a man facing the proper left in a green coat, yellow waistcoat and white cra…
John Wesley Jarvis
c. 1820 - 1822
A landscape painting with a woman in a red dress holding a child under a tree at left with thre…
Aaron Bohrod
c. 1938 - 1939
An idyllic landscape with a small river in the center flowing passed a rocky promontory jutting…
George Barret
before 1763