|
See also: American landscape painter, was See also: born at Bolton-le-Moors, See also: England, on the 1st of See also: February 18o1
.
In 1819 the See also: family emigrated to See also: America, settling first in See also: Philadelphia and then at See also: Steubenville, See also: Ohio, where See also: Cole learned the rudiments of his profession from a wandering portrait painter named Stein
.
He went about the country See also: painting portraits, but with little See also: financial success
.
Removing to New See also: York (1825), he displayed some landscapes in the window of an eating-See also: house, where they attracted the See also: attention of the painter Colonel See also: Trumbull, who sought him out, bought one of his canvases, and found him patrons
.
From this See also: time Cole was prosperous
.
He is best remembered by a series of pictures consisting of four canvases representing " The Voyage of See also: Life," and another series of five canvases representing " The Course of See also: Empire," the latter now in the gallery of the New York See also: Historical Society
.
They were allegories, in the taste of the See also: day, and became exceedingly popular, being reproduced in engravings with See also: great success
.
The See also: work, however, was meretricious, the sentiment false, artificial and conventional, and the artist's genuine fame must rest on his landscapes, which, though thin in the painting, hard in the handling, and not infrequently painful in detail, were at least earnest endeavours to portray the See also: world out of doors as it appeared to the painter; their failings were the result of Cole's environment and training
.
He had an influence on his time and his See also: fellows which was considerable, and with See also: Durand he may be said to have founded the early school of American landscape painters
.
Cole spent the years 1829–1832 and 1841–1842 abroad, mainly in See also: Italy, and at Florence lived with the sculptor See also: Greenough
.
After 1827 he had a studio in the Catskills which furnished the subjects of some of his canvases, and he died at Catskill, New York, on the 11th of February 1848
.
His pictures are in many public and private collections
.
His " Expulsion fromSee also: Eden " is in the Metropolitan Museum in New York
.
|
|
|
[back] SIR HENRY COLE (1808–1882) |
[next] TIMOTHY COLE (1852– ) |
There are no comments yet for this article.
Do not copy, download, transfer, or otherwise replicate the site content in whole or in part.
Links to articles and home page are encouraged.