Cotopaxi, Tanicuchi, Equador (Cotopaxi) - Frederic Edwin Church
Tanicuchi - Equador
Detroit Institute of Arts, Detroit, Estados Unidos
OST - 121x215 - 1862
Cotopaxi, the quintessential nineteenth-century vision of
nature’s sublime and terrifying power, was painted on commission for the
well-known book collector and philanthropist James Lenox when Church was at the
height of his fame. The painting made a tremendous impact on the American art
public, who perceived it as a geological parable of the Civil War then in
progress. The viewer’s attention is focused on two principal motifs—the burning
disc of the rising sun in its contest with the smoldering volcano. The colors
radiate with fiery intensity against a low, pearlescent skyline. In this cosmic
drama of light dispelling darkness, Church mirrors the contemporary tragedy of
the Civil War and offers hope for its resolution through the cross formed by
the sun’s reflection on the lake. No other representation so summarized
American ideals at this critical point in the nation’s history.


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