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暴雨后马萨诸塞州北安普敦圣轭山风景——牛轭湾处

Thomas Cole American
1836
On view at The Met Fifth Avenue in Gallery 759
科尔被圣轭山下康涅狄格河那古怪的曲折所深深吸引,这幅巨大的、戏剧性的绘画就是以这个“牛轭湾”为主题。他在这片景色中注入了暴雨后天空中闪现的那种不同寻常的光辉。荒山依然被残留的乌云遮蔽,远处蜿蜒的河流和田野却已经透出光芒。艺术家将未被驯服的荒野与田园风光的村落并置,以强调这个国家的风景中固有的诸多可能性,同时他也以艺术家的洞察力和想象力美化了实际中的场景。在画的前景中可以看到科尔本人,以及他的画架和雨伞。

Artwork Details

Object Information
  • 标题: 暴雨后马萨诸塞州北安普敦圣轭山风景——牛轭湾处
  • 艺术家: 托马斯·科尔,美国,1801–1848年
  • 创作日期: 1836年
  • 材料: 布面油画
  • 尺寸: 511⁄2 x 76英寸(130.8 x 193厘米)
  • 来源信息: 罗素·赛吉夫人捐赠,1908年
  • 藏品编号: 08.228
  • Curatorial Department: The American Wing

Audio

仅适用于: 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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