Hoher Göll | Art in Heritage

$449.00

Hoher Göll — Carl Triebel

Hoher Göll centers on a mountain landscape shaped by broad sky, warm evening light, and a winding path that leads the eye through the foreground. Mature trees, scattered rocks, and small resting figures give the scene a pastoral calm, while a distant structure anchors the view in place. Rather than presenting the mountain as purely dramatic, the composition feels measured and serene, balancing natural scale with a sense of quiet human presence.

Carl Triebel was a nineteenth-century German landscape painter associated with mountain and regional views. In works like this, landscape is not treated as a backdrop alone, but as the main presence of the image, with light and terrain carrying much of its character.

Expressed on silk and paired with integrated illumination, the artwork takes on a different presence from traditional surfaces. The translucency of silk allows light to pass through the image, introducing a sense of depth and softness that changes with its surroundings. Rather than remaining a fixed image, the piece responds to light and its environment, shifting in presence throughout the day. Appearing quiet and refined in natural light, it becomes softly luminous as light grows more prominent.

Hoher Göll — Carl Triebel

Hoher Göll centers on a mountain landscape shaped by broad sky, warm evening light, and a winding path that leads the eye through the foreground. Mature trees, scattered rocks, and small resting figures give the scene a pastoral calm, while a distant structure anchors the view in place. Rather than presenting the mountain as purely dramatic, the composition feels measured and serene, balancing natural scale with a sense of quiet human presence.

Carl Triebel was a nineteenth-century German landscape painter associated with mountain and regional views. In works like this, landscape is not treated as a backdrop alone, but as the main presence of the image, with light and terrain carrying much of its character.

Expressed on silk and paired with integrated illumination, the artwork takes on a different presence from traditional surfaces. The translucency of silk allows light to pass through the image, introducing a sense of depth and softness that changes with its surroundings. Rather than remaining a fixed image, the piece responds to light and its environment, shifting in presence throughout the day. Appearing quiet and refined in natural light, it becomes softly luminous as light grows more prominent.