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매사추세츠 노샘프턴 홀요크산에서 본 전경, 폭풍우 이후—우각호

Thomas Cole American
1836
On view at The Met Fifth Avenue in Gallery 759
콜은 마운트 홀요크 밑에서 코네티컷 강의 희한하게 굽어 흐르는 것에 반하여 소위 우각호라 불리는 것을 이 대형의 드라마틱한 회화의 주제로 삼았습니다. 그는 폭풍우를 잇따른 으스스한 빛으로 경치를 적시고 있습니다. 산의 황야는 아직도 머무르는 먹구름에 의해 그늘졌지만 저 너머의 휘어지는 강과 들판은 희미하게 빛납니다. 이 화가는 국가 지형 고유의 가망성을 강조하기 위해 거친 황야와 전원의 정착을 병렬시켰으며 실제적인 장소를 자신의 예술적인 비전과 상상을 통해 변모시켜 놓았습니다. 콜 자신도 그의 이젤과 우산과 함께 전경에 나타납니다.

Artwork Details

Object Information
  • 제목: 매사추세츠 노샘프턴 홀요크산에서 본 전경, 폭풍우 이후—우각호
  • 아티스트: 토머스 콜 미국, 1801– 1848년
  • 연대: 1836년
  • 재료: 캔버스에 유화
  • 크기: 130.8 × 193cm
  • 크레디트 라인: 러셀 세이지 부인 기증, 1908
  • 작품 번호: 08.228
  • Curatorial Department: The American Wing

Audio

다음에서만 사용 가능: English
Cover Image for 4026. Thomas Cole, *View from Mount Holyoke, Northampton, Massachusetts, after a Thunderstorm—The Oxbow*, 1836

4026. Thomas Cole, View from Mount Holyoke, Northampton, Massachusetts, after a Thunderstorm—The Oxbow, 1836

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XIYE BASTIDA: I see this dichotomy between wilderness and development.

NARRATOR: On one side of Thomas Cole’s masterwork, storm clouds roll in over untamed wilderness. On the other, a pastoral landscape is bathed in sunlight. This dramatic contrast has been interpreted in numerous ways, representing both a hopeful vision for America’s future and a manifesto for wilderness preservation.

But seen through a contemporary lens, a more ominous metaphor takes shape.

XIYE BASTIDA: My name is Xiye Bastida. I'm a climate activist.

I think that Cole is really calling out the fact that our way of developing, our way of improving the land or making it profitable was pushing nature out, Indigenous people out.

Obviously, at this time, the Indian Removal Act was happening and this act caused a lot of suffering, caused a lot of pain. It pushed Indigenous peoples into reservations that were areas that they had no knowledge of, no connection to.

NARRATOR: Development not only forced Indigenous peoples from their ancestral lands, but also contributed to another threat: climate change. Today, Bastida’s town in Mexico experiences severe flooding. From this vantage point, maybe Cole’s painting offers us more than a magnificent landscape; it also casts shadows over the legacy of our interconnected worlds and histories.

XIYE BASTIDA: There is this really beautiful saying that my dad taught me, which is common to Indigenous communities all around the world, that says “we need to look at the wisdom of the past seven generations to ensure the stability of the future.”

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