Thomas Cole
English, American
In 1825 Thomas Cole made his first trip up the Hudson River to the Catskill Mountains, finding the subject with which he secured his reputation as a great painter of the American landscape. Cole’s journey coincided with the growth of tourism and trade in the region, and he blazed a trail for other Hudson River School painters who portrayed this landscape as an American Eden.
Born
1801
Died
1848
![View Near the Village of Catskill](/sites/default/files/styles/lens_search_card/public/2018-12/cole_viewnearthevillageofcatskill_index.jpg?itok=VqSc5Pt9)
What do trees symbolize in your life?
This scene looks toward the Catskill Mountains from the New York village of Catskill, a view that Cole first sketched in the summer of 1825. The composition is stagelike, with its central body of water, distant mountains, and luminous atmosphere. The robust tree next to a dying stump in the foreground represent the cycle of life and death, demonstrating Cole’s aesthetic philosophy of endowing landscapes with symbolic significance and showing a harmonious balance between nature and settlement.
Medium
Oil on panel
Credit
Gift of Mr. and Mrs. John D. Rockefeller 3rd
Item ID
1993.35.7
Dimensions
24 1/2 x 35 in. (62.2 x 88.9 cm)
Date
1827
Country
Artist name
Thomas Cole
Artwork location