Cotopaxi, Tanicuchi, Equador (Cotopaxi) - Frederic Edwin Church
Tanicuchi - Equador
Smithsonian American Art Museum, Washington D.C. Estados Unidos
OST - 71x106 - 1855
Frederic Church was an ambitious painter and enthusiastic
amateur scientist. He had read Darwin's books and Alexander von Humboldt's
descriptions of Cotopaxi,"the most dreadful volcano...its explosions most
frequent and disastrous."The fabled Ecuadorian mountain provided both a
poetic symbol of God's creation and an exciting window into the planet's
natural history. Geology was a new science in the nineteenth century, and
Church was among those who believed that volcanoes offered clues to the age and
origins of the earth.
On his first visit to Ecuador, the artist waited an entire day
near the hacienda pictured here, hoping that the clouds would part to reveal
the peak. American critics complained that Church's paintings of the volcano
did not capture the soft atmospheric haze that they were used to seeing in
landscapes. Those who had never traveled to the high country of the Andes did
not understand that in the thin, clear air, Cotopaxi's icy flanks gleamed just
as Church had painted them.

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