Wanderer Above the Sea of Fog, oil painting by German artist Caspar David Friedrich that was completed about 1818. It is regarded as one of the most representative and important works of the German Romantic movement.
The sublime power of nature is a dominant theme in Friedrich’s paintings. The landscape of his native Germany was a source of inspiration, but his personal history might also explain the ominous tension between beauty and terror in his representation of nature. When he was 13 years old, he was skating with his younger brother on a frozen lake when the ice cracked, and his brother fell through and drowned, by some accounts in the course of saving him. Friedrich’s philosophy of art was expressed in his statement that “The painter should paint not only what he has in front of him, but also what he sees inside himself. If he sees nothing within, then he should stop painting what is in front of him.”
The lone, elegant figure in Wanderer Above the Sea of Fog stands with his back to the viewer, a device called Rückenfigur that Friedrich frequently employed. The man is depicted standing on a rocky precipice gazing at a valley in which rocks, trees, and mountains appear rising above a thick, rolling mist. This painting was not based upon an actual view experienced by Friedrich but consists of details drawn from sketches of various places he visited, including locations in Germany and Switzerland.The identity of the lone figure has been the subject of debate. Some believe it to be the artist himself, while one scholar believes it to be a portrait of a forestry official who had recently been killed fighting for Prussia against Napoleonic France. Friedrich, who began painting in oils only after age 30, demonstrates a clear understanding of the medium in the depths of dark color he employs to execute his mysterious, foreboding imagery.
Friedrich’s work had begun to fall out of favor by the end of his lifetime. In the 20th century his work was rediscovered and was seen as quintessentially German, a view that Adolf Hitler appropriated, and Friedrich’s art was used as Nazi propaganda. That connection caused his work to return to disfavor, but the mystical, melancholic beauty of his landscapes has received reappraisal and renewed interest from the 1970s.