Cordilheira dos Andes, Equador (The Andes of Ecuador) - Frederic Edwin Church
Equador
Reynolda House Museum of American Art, Winston-Salem, Estados Unidos
OST - 121x194 - 1855
“Painted after Frederic Edwin Church’s first trip to Ecuador
[1853], The Andes of Ecuador combines
the scientific and religious concerns of Church’s time in one grand panorama.
The infinite botanical detail, the terrifying depths of the abyss, and the
overwhelming sense of unlimited space combine to communicate a powerful sense
of the sublime.” The painting encourages both distanced and close viewing
through a dramatic sweeping vista that contains several small vignettes and
seemingly endless details. Two figures in the left foreground pray in front of
an archaic stone cross, colorful birds flocking in a palm tree above them. This
scene is balanced on the right by cascades of water and a small lake. Snow-capped
peaks in the background—Tungurahua on the left and the cone of Cotopaxi on the
right—frame the distant view. The white-hot light of a centrally placed sun
permeates a warm palette of sienna browns and lush greens.
Church
depicted various plant and animal species with exactness while imbuing the
painting with an explicit Christian iconography, mirroring contemporary
thinking about science and religion. Through his overt allusions to
Christianity within the Ecuadorian landscape, “Church was intimating that
Americans inhabited a new Eden, a new promised land, and in standing before
this sublime grandeur one enjoyed the metaphoric presence of Genesis.” From the
llamas grazing in the center foreground to the distant snowy peaks, the
multiple ecosystems correspond to Alexander Von Humboldt’s belief in the
harmony of nature in which biology, botany, and geology coalesce to determine
vegetation. His theories were popular with artists of the nineteenth century,
who saw in them a way to reconcile God’s divinity with scientific advancements.
In the Cotopaxi region of Ecuador both Humboldt and Church found in one locale
perennial summers—the tropics—juxtaposed with ice-covered volcanic mountains.
A
critic writing for The Crayon in
1855 acclaimed the canvas Church’s “most important work yet,” and a student
recalled how he painted “with a rapidity and precision which were simply
inconceivable by one who had not seen him at work.” In addition, The
Andes of Ecuador is an early masterpiece of Luminism, a style
prevalent in the late nineteenth century that consisted of radiant,
light-filled quiet vistas.

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