,
The Slave Ship, 1840 The Romantic period saw marine painting rejoin the mainstream of art, although many specialized painters continued to develop the "ship portrait" genre.
Antoine Roux and sons dominated maritime art in
Marseille throughout the 1800s with detailed portraits of ships and maritime life. Arguably the greatest icon of Romanticism in art is
Théodore Géricault's
The Raft of the Medusa (1819), and for
J. M. W. Turner painting the sea was a lifelong obsession. The
Medusa is a radical type of history painting, while Turner's works, even when given history subjects, are essentially approached as landscapes. His public commission
The Battle of Trafalgar (1824) was criticised for inaccuracy, and his most personal late works make no attempt at accurate detail, often having lengthy titles to explain what might otherwise seem an unreadable mass of "soapsuds and whitewash", as
The Athenaeum described Turner's ''
Snow Storm – Steam-Boat off a Harbour's Mouth making Signals in Shallow Water, and going by the Lead. The Author was in this Storm on the Night the Ariel left Harwich'' of 1842. ,
The Ninth Wave, 1850The new force in painting, the
art of Denmark, featured coastal scenes very strongly, with an emphasis on tranquil waters and still, golden light. These influenced the German
Caspar David Friedrich, who added an element of Romantic mysticism, as in
The Stages of Life (1835); his
The Sea of Ice is less typical, showing a polar shipwreck.
Ivan Aivazovsky continued the old themes of battles, shipwrecks and storms with a full-blooded Russian Romanticism, as in
The Ninth Wave (1850). River, harbour and coastal scenes, typically with only small boats, were popular with
Corot and the
Barbizon school, especially
Charles-François Daubigny; many of the most famous works of the most important Russian landscapist,
Isaac Levitan, featured tranquil lakes and also the huge rivers of Russia, which he and many artists treated as a source of national pride.
Gustave Courbet painted a number of scenes of beaches with cliffs and views looking out to sea of waves breaking on a beach, usually with no human figures or craft. During the 1860s
Édouard Manet painted a number of paintings depicting important and newsworthy events including his 1864 'marine' painting of the
Battle of the Kearsarge and the Alabama, memorializing a sea battle that took place in 1864 during the
Civil War in the United States. , after a painting by G.F. St.JohnThe ship portrait genre was taken to America by a number of emigrants, most English like
James E. Buttersworth (1817–1894) and
Robert Salmon (1775 – c. 1845). The
Luminist Fitz Henry Lane (1804–1865) was the earliest of a number of artists who developed American styles based in landscape art; he painted small boats at rest in tranquil small bays.
Martin Johnson Heade was a member of the
Hudson River School, and painted tranquil scenes, but also threatening storms of alarming blackness.
Winslow Homer increasingly specialized in marine scenes with small boats towards the end of the century, often showing boats in heavy swells on the open sea, as in his
The Gulf Stream.
Thomas Eakins often painted river scenes, including
Max Schmitt in a Single Scull (1871). , 1864. Figures identified include
Guy de Maupassant, in blue cap at left. Later in the century, as the coast became increasingly regarded as a place of pleasure rather than work, beach scenes and coastal landscapes without any shipping became prominent for the first time, often including cliffs and rock formations, which had earlier been mostly found in scenes of shipwreck. Many later beach scenes became increasingly crowded, as holidaymakers took over the beaches of Europe.
Eugène Lepoittevin painted maritime subjects ranging from naval battles and shipwrecks to scenes of fisherman at work and swimmers relaxing at the beach at
Étretat in
Normandy.
Eugène Boudin's scenes of the beaches of north France strike a familiar note to the modern viewer, despite the heavy clothing worn by the ladies sitting on chairs in the sand. The
Impressionists painted many scenes of beaches, cliffs and rivers, especially
Claude Monet, who often returned to Courbet's themes, as in
Stormy Sea in Étretat. It was his
Impression, Sunrise (1872), a view over the waters of the harbour at
Le Havre, that had given the movement its name. River scenes were very common among the Impressionists, especially by Monet and
Alfred Sisley. When the American navy adopted the idea in 1918,
Frederick Judd Waugh was put in charge of design. Specialized marine painters concentrating on ship portraits continue to the present day, with artists such as
Montague Dawson (1895–1973), whose works were very popular in reproduction; like many, he found works showing traditional sailing ships more in demand than those of modern vessels. Even in 1838 Turner's
The Fighting Temeraire tugged to her last Berth to be broken up, still probably his most famous work, displayed nostalgia for the age of sail. Marine subjects still attract many mainstream artists, and more popular forms of marine art remain enormously popular, as shown by the parodic series of paintings by
Vitaly Komar and
Alexander Melamid called ''America's Most Wanted Painting'', with variants for several countries, almost all featuring a lakeside view. Marine art was also a specialty of
contemporary realist Ann Mikolowski (1940–1999), whose work includes studies of the U.S.
Great Lakes and
Atlantic coastlines.
19th-century gallery File:Joseph Mallord William Turner 024.jpg|
J. M. W. Turner.
Calais Pier, 1803 File:The Monk by the Sea (Friedrich).jpg|
Caspar David Friedrich,
The Monk by the Sea, 1809 File:Indsejlingen til København )J. C. Dahl).jpg|
J. C. Dahl,
Entrance to Copenhagen, 1830 File:Caspar David Friedrich - Die Lebensstufen (ca. 1834).jpg|
Caspar David Friedrich,
The Stages of Life, 1835 File:Udsigt fra Dosseringen ved Sortedamssøen mod Nørrebro.jpg|
Christen Købke,
View of Lake Sortedam, 1838 File:Lepoittevin--Shipwreck on Dover Coast, n.d., private collection.jpg|
Eugène Lepoittevin,
Shipwreck off the Cliffs of Dover at Night with Dover Castle in the Distance, c. 1840 Image:Salem Harbor Fitz Hugh Lane.jpeg|
Fitz Henry Lane,
Salem Harbor, 1853 Image:Афонское сражение 19 июня 1807 года. 1853.jpg|
Alexey Bogolyubov,
Battle of Athos, 1853 Image:Christ sur la mer de Galilée (Delacroix) Walters Art Museum 37.186.jpg|
Eugène Delacroix,
Christ on the Sea of Galilee, 1854 File:Édouard Manet-Kearsarge-Alabama2.jpg|
Édouard Manet,
Battle of the Kearsarge and the Alabama, 1864 File:James Abbot McNeill Whistler 007.jpg|
James Abbott McNeill Whistler,
Harmony in Blue and Silver:Trouville, 1865 File:Gustave Courbet - Autumn Sea - Google Art Project.jpg|
Gustave Courbet,
Autumn Sea, 1867 File:Gustave Courbet 019.jpg|
Gustave Courbet,
The Waves, 1869 File:AlbertBierstadt-San Francisco Bay.jpg|
Albert Bierstadt,
San Francisco Bay, 1871–1873 Image:Max Schmitt in a Single Scull.jpg|
Thomas Eakins,
Max Schmitt in a single scull, 1871 File:Hans Gude Innseilingen.JPG|
Hans Gude,
Sailing into Oslo Fiord, 1872 File:Archip Iwanowitsch Kuindshi 008.jpg|
Arkhip Kuindzhi,
Lake Ladoga, 1873 File:Starting out after rail thomas eakins.jpeg|
Thomas Eakins,
Starting Out After Rail, 1874 File:Vague-renoir.jpg|
Pierre-Auguste Renoir,
The Wave, 1879 Image:Mesdag, Pinks in the breakers.jpg|
Hendrik Willem Mesdag,
Pinks in the breakers, c. 1880 File:Claude Monet The Cliffs at Etretat.jpg|
Claude Monet,
The Cliffs at Étretat, 1885 File:Ships at Le Havre.jpeg|
Eugène Boudin,
Ships at Le Havre, 1887 File:Enrique Simonet - Marina veneciana 6MB.jpg|
Enrique Simonet,
Venetian marine, 1887–1890 File:Winslow Homer - Sunlight on the Coast - Google Art Project.jpg|
Winslow Homer,
Sunlight on the Coast, 1890 File:Eugène Chigot Échouage par gros temps ( !892) Musée de Picardie.jpg|
Eugène Chigot,
Stranded in Heavy Weather (Échouage par gros temps) 1892 File:Monet-seine-rouen.jpg|
Claude Monet,
The Seine at Port-Villez, 1894
20th-century gallery Image:Levitan ozero28.JPG|
Isaac Levitan,
Lake. Russia 1900 File:Dabo - The Seashore.jpg|
Leon Dabo,
The Seashore, ca. 1900 File:August Afternoon Appledore Childe Hassam.jpg|
Childe Hassam,
August Afternoon, Appledore, 1900 File:Camille Pissarro (1830-1903) - 'Morning, Winter Sunshine, Frost, the Pont-Neuf, the Seine, the Louvre, Soleil D'hiver Gella Blanc', ca. 1901.jpg|
Camille Pissarro, ''Morning, Winter Sunshine, Frost, the Pont-Neuf, the Seine, the Louvre, Soleil D'hiver Gella Blanc'', c. 1901 Image:Winslow Homer Summer Squall.jpg|
Winslow Homer,
Summer Squall, 1904 Image:SeineChatou.JPG|
Maurice de Vlaminck,
The River Seine at Chatou, 1906 File:Robert Antoine Pinchon, before 1909, Péniche dans la brume, oil on canvas, 54 x 73 cm, Musée des Beaux-Arts de Rouen, donation François Depeaux, 1909.jpg|
Robert Antoine Pinchon,
Péniche dans la brume, before 1909,
Musée des Beaux-Arts de Rouen File:Paul Signac - Antibes, die Türme.jpeg|
Paul Signac,
Antibes, the towers, 1911 File:Eugène Chigot Voiliers au Port c1911.jpg|
Eugène Chigot',
Voiliers au Port (sailing boats in the port), 1911 File:George Bellows West Wind.jpg|
George Bellows,
West Wind, 1913 File:H. S. Tuke Four Masted Barque 1914.jpg|
Henry Scott Tuke,
Four Masted Barque, 1914 Image:Track of Lusitania.jpg|
William Lionel Wyllie,
The Track of Lusitania. View of Casualties and Survivors in the Water and in Lifeboats, 1915 Image:Peter benois.jpg|
Alexander Benois,
On a deserted, wave-swept shore..., 1916 File:US Navy 030204-N-0000X-001 This 1922 artwork depicts the sinking of the Confederate ship CSS Alabama.jpg|
Xanthus Russell Smith,
The Kearsarge and the Alabama, 1922
21st-century gallery File:Seebild 2014 Öl auf Leinwand 150 x 200 cm.jpg|
Ingo Kühl,
Seebild 2014 ==East Asian traditions==