Cotopaxi

Frederic Edwin Church, Cotopaxi, 1855, oil on canvas, Smithsonian American Art Museum, Gift of Mrs. Frank R. McCoy, 1965.12
Frederic Edwin Church, Cotopaxi, 1855, oil on canvas, 2842 in. (71.1106.8 cm), Smithsonian American Art Museum, Gift of Mrs. Frank R. McCoy, 1965.12
Free to use

Artwork Details

Title
Cotopaxi
Date
1855
Dimensions
2842 in. (71.1106.8 cm)
Credit Line
Gift of Mrs. Frank R. McCoy
Mediums
Mediums Description
oil on canvas
Classifications
Subjects
  • Landscape — phenomenon — volcano
  • Landscape — tropic
  • Landscape — mountain — Mount Cotopaxi
  • Landscape — Ecuador
  • Architecture Exterior — domestic — house
Object Number
1965.12

Artwork Description

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.

Exhibition Label, Smithsonian American Art Museum, 2006

Works by this artist (15 items)

Stuart Golder, Two Door Rhombo, 1978, sterling silver and 18k gold, Smithsonian American Art Museum, Gift of Paul and Carole Garrison, 2000.41.14, © 1970-78, Stuart Golder
Two Door Rhombo
Date1978
sterling silver and 18k gold
Not on view
Stuart Golder, Shell Container, 1978, sterling silver, 18k gold, and copper, Smithsonian American Art Museum, Gift of Paul and Carole Garrison, 2000.41.12, © 1970-78, Stuart Golder
Shell Container
Date1978
sterling silver, 18k gold, and copper
Not on view
Stuart Golder, Pomander, 1977, sterling silver, 18k gold and cloves, Smithsonian American Art Museum, Gift of Paul and Carole Garrison, 2000.41.5, © 1970-78, Stuart Golder
Pomander
Date1977
sterling silver, 18k gold and cloves
Not on view
Stuart Golder, Threaded Stopper, 1978, sterling silver, Smithsonian American Art Museum, Gift of Paul and Carole Garrison, 2000.41.11A-B, © 1970-78, Stuart Golder
Threaded Stopper
Date1978
sterling silver
Not on view

More Artworks from the Collection

Valeri Timofeev, Chalice, 1995, fine and sterling silver, 24k gold plate, 24k gold foil, garnets, pearls, turquoise, hematite, tiger's eye, filigree wire, and plique-a-jour on Thompson and Blythe enamels, Smithsonian American Art Museum, Gift of the James Renwick Alliance, 1996.29
Chalice
Date1995
fine and sterling silver, 24k gold plate, 24k gold foil, garnets, pearls, turquoise, hematite, tiger's eye, filigree wire, and plique-a-jour on Thompson and Blythe enamels
Not on view
Olaf Skoogfors, Pin/Pendant, ca. 1969, gold plated sterling silver, Smithsonian American Art Museum, Gift of Leona S. and Paul D. Rosenstock, 1996.103, © 1978, Judy Skoogfors
Pin/​Pendant
Dateca. 1969
gold plated sterling silver
Not on view
Michael Croft, Easter Egg Box, n.d., original design 1967, cast, electroplated, oxidized and buffed silver and gold, Smithsonian American Art Museum, Museum purchase, 1975.148.1A-B
Easter Egg Box
Daten.d., original design 1967
cast, electroplated, oxidized and buffed silver and gold
Not on view
Tod Pardon, Metha, 1996, sterling silver, 14k gold, copper, pigment, simulated ivory horn, wood, beads, Smithsonian American Art Museum, Gift of Martha and Pat Connell, 1996.100
Metha
Date1996
sterling silver, 14k gold, copper, pigment, simulated ivory horn, wood, beads
On view