Estação das Chuvas nos Trópicos (Rainy Season in the Tropics) - Frederic Edwin Church
De Young Museum, São Francisco, Estados Unidos
OST - 142x213 - 1866
“Rainy Season in the Tropics” is one of the most celebrated
works by the second-generation Hudson River School artist Frederic Edwin Church.
Despite being a highly theatrical, fantastical, and symbolic landscape, the
scene incorporates a number of scientifically accurate and observed elements. The
double rainbow that spans the canvas, notable for the reversal of the color
spectrum that occurs in the second of its two bands, is technically known as
Alexander’s band, and Church’s meticulous depiction of it suggests that he may
have consulted a scientific treatise when painting the scene.
Furthermore, the tropical fauna emerging from the bottom right
corner of the painting is based on botanical sketches Church made while living
in Jamaica.
Church and his wife retreated to the island in 1865 after the deaths of their
two children from diphtheria, but when they returned to the United States the
following year they were expecting a child. Many scholars interpret “Rainy
Season in the Tropics” as a reflection of Church’s renewed optimism, both about
his personal life and about a spirit of national unity following the end of the
American Civil War.

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