Thomas Cole’s Catskills
John Walsh Friday, October 27, 2017, 1:30 pm Thomas Cole (1801–1848) spent decades living near Catskill Creek, the Hudson River tributary in upstate New York, and he painted the creek with the Catskill Mountains in the distance more often than any other subject. What did these compositions represent to him? This lecture considers Cole’s North Mountain and Catskill Creek of 1838 and other works by the pioneer Romantic painter, whose portrayals of a wild new land were a mix of observation, pictorial tradition, and poetic manipulation. Generously sponsored by the Martin A. Ryerson Lectureship Fund. In each lecture in this series, John Walsh selects an American painting in the Gallery’s collection and examines the similarities and differences between depiction and reality, returning to the painter’s original vantage point in an attempt to work out just what happened when he returned to the studio. Note: This lecture is the first in the series American Views, Viewpoints, and Manipulations. All lectures are held in the Robert L. McNeil, Jr., Lecture Hall.

Van Gogh in Arles I: Town, Fields, and Gardens

"Thomas Cole's Journey: Atlantic Crossings and Nineteenth-Century Landscape Painting"

Appearance and Reality in Dutch Art

Sunday Salon: "Thomas Cole's 'The Clove, Catskills'" with Michael Quituisaca

Thomas Cole's Art in 4K: A Visual Journey with Elegant Background Music

David Dunlop - Painting the Sea at Winslow Homer's Prouts Neck, Maine - #206

Catskill Mountain Legends | Rip Van Winkle

James Abbott McNeill Whistler in London

Scott Ritter: Russland gewinnt den Krieg – und das eindeutig

Curator's introduction | Thomas Cole: Eden to Empire | National Gallery

Nature and the American Vision: The Hudson River School | Curator Confidential

Lecture 6: Johannes Vermeer’s View of Delft: The Prose and Poetry of View Painting

Van Gogh and the Asylum at Saint-Rémy

The Last Cape Horners

A New Look at Impressionism: Materials and Techniques of the French Impressionists

Rank and Status in the Dutch Golden Age

John Constable: The radical landscape of The Hay Wain | National Gallery

Thomas Cole: America's first environmentalist artist

Thomas Cole: Painting the American Landscape

