Pichincha, Equador (Pichincha) - Frederic Edwin Church
Pichincha - Equador
Philadelphia Museum of Art, Filadélfia, Estados Unidos
OST - 78x122 - 1867
Church became famous for his paintings of natural wonders like Niagara Falls,
icebergs in the Arctic, and volcanoes in South America. He sketched this
volcano, called Pichincha, on a trip to Ecuador in 1857, but made the painting
ten years later in the comfort of his studio in New York. In the finished work,
Church added palm trees that
could not have grown on the high Andean plain. Although the volcano is dormant
in the picture, its eruptions were frequent and dangerous. It had also been the
site of a fierce battle in 1822 between Ecuadorian patriots
(fighting for independence) and royalists (loyal to Spain), after which the
country was plunged into uncertainty and sectionalism, much like the post-Civil
War United States was facing at the time Church made this painting.

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