ArtworkStatus unknown

Distant View of Niagara Falls

0 likesNot savedShare from mobile app
oil paint (paint)60 × 47 Cm

Views

0

Likes

0

Saves

Not saved

Shares

0

About the artwork
Artist supplied description.

Thomas Cole visited Niagara Falls in May 1829, composing this romanticized, autumnal scene the following year. Portraying the grandeur of the American landscape, the artist omitted the factories, scenic overlooks, and hotels that populated the area in the early 19th century. Cole expressed concern about the environmental impact of voracious industrialism, but at the same time his painting erased the human devastation wrought by colonialism and conquest in the region, which encompassed Attiwonderonk, Haudenosaunee, and Wenrohronon lands. The two Native American figures at center, combined with the falls, identify the setting as North America, but their diminished presence in scale and number reinforces the false idea of the “vanishing Indian” and is meant to signal impending transformation rather than acknowledge their stolen sovereignty.

Artwork metadata
Structured fields synced from connected systems.
Mediumoil paint (paint)
Dimensions60 × 47 Cm
Tags
landscapes
CertificateCertificate not provided
Timeline
Chain of custody, exhibitions, and verification milestones synced from the provenance service.
Mon
19
Jan
exhibition

New York, The Metropolitan Museum of Art, Thomas Cole’s Journey: Atlantic Crossings, Jan. 30–May 13, 2018, cat. 19 ; London, The National Gallery, June 11–Oct. 7, 2018.

New York, The Metropolitan Museum of Art, Thomas Cole’s Journey: Atlantic Crossings, Jan. 30–May 13, 2018, cat. 19 ; London, The National Gallery, June 11–Oct. 7, 2018.
Mon
19
Jan
note

Paintings at the Art Institute of Chicago, Highlights of the Collection

Paintings at the Art Institute of Chicago, Highlights of the Collection (Chicago: Art Institute of Chicago/Yale University Press, 2017), 50.
Mon
19
Jan
note

Rachel Bohan, "Jacob Kassay: No Goal,"

Rachel Bohan, "Jacob Kassay: No Goal," (The Power Station/Dallas, 2014), (ill.).
Mon
19
Jan
note

Stephanie Pratt et al., "George Catlin: American Indian Portraits," exh. cat.

Stephanie Pratt et al., "George Catlin: American Indian Portraits," exh. cat. (Washington, DC: National Portrait Gallery/National Portrait Gallery Company, 2013).
Mon
19
Jan
exhibition

Art Institute of Chicago, <a href="https://www.artic.edu/exhibitions/2838/window-on-the-west-chicago-and-the-art-of-the-new-frontier-1890-1940"><em>Window on the West: Chicago and the Art of the New Frontier, 1890–1940</em></a>...

Art Institute of Chicago, Window on the West: Chicago and the Art of the New Frontier, 1890–1940, June 28–Oct. 13, 2003.
Mon
19
Jan
exhibition

Hartford, Wadsworth Atheneum, Thomas Cole 1801–1848: One Hundred Years Later, Nov. 12, 1948–Jan. 2, 1949, cat. 155, as Niagara Falls; New York City, Whitney Museum of American Art, Jan. 8–30, 1949.

Hartford, Wadsworth Atheneum, Thomas Cole 1801–1848: One Hundred Years Later, Nov. 12, 1948–Jan. 2, 1949, cat. 155, as Niagara Falls; New York City, Whitney Museum of American Art, Jan. 8–30, 1949.
Mon
19
Jan
exhibition

Milwaukee Art Institute, Nineteenth Century American Masters, Feb. 20–Mar. 28, 1948, cat. 12.

Milwaukee Art Institute, Nineteenth Century American Masters, Feb. 20–Mar. 28, 1948, cat. 12.
Mon
19
Jan
note

Mrs....

Mrs. Edith Mendelssohn-Bartholdy, London, by 1946
Mon
19
Jan
note

to the Art Institute of Chicago, 1946.

to the Art Institute of Chicago, 1946.
Mon
19
Jan
note

M....

M. Knoedler, London, 1937
Mon
19
Jan
note

Julia D. Sophronia Snow, “Delineators of the Adams–Jackson American Views,” Antiques

Julia D. Sophronia Snow, “Delineators of the Adams–Jackson American Views,” Antiques (November 1936): 214–19.
Mon
19
Jan
note

Frank Sabin, London, by 1936

Frank Sabin, London, by 1936
Mon
19
Jan
note

Judith A. Barter, et al., American Arts at The Art Institute of Chicago: From Colonial Times to World War I

Judith A. Barter, et al., American Arts at The Art Institute of Chicago: From Colonial Times to World War I (Chicago: Art Institute of Chicago, 1998).
Wed
19
Jan
note

William H. Truettner and Alan Wallach, eds., Thomas Cole: Landscape into History

William H. Truettner and Alan Wallach, eds., Thomas Cole: Landscape into History (Washington, DC: National Museum of American Art, Smithsonian Institution, 1994), ill.
Tue
19
Jan
note

Thomas Cole: Drawn to Nature, exh. cat.,

Thomas Cole: Drawn to Nature, exh. cat., (Albany: Albany Institute of History and Art, 1993).
Tue
19
Jan
note

Angela Miller, The Empire of the Eye

Angela Miller, The Empire of the Eye (Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 1993).
Fri
19
Jan
note

Earl A. Powell, Thomas Cole

Earl A. Powell, Thomas Cole (New York: Harry N. Abrams Publishers, 1990).
Tue
19
Jan
note

Ellwood Parry III, The Art of Thomas Cole: Ambition and Imagination

Ellwood Parry III, The Art of Thomas Cole: Ambition and Imagination (Newark, DE: University of Delaware Press, 1988).
Sat
19
Jan
exhibition

Washington, DC, Corcoran Gallery of Art, Niagara: Two Centuries of Changing Attitudes, 1697–1901, Sept. 21–Nov. 24, 1985; Buffalo, NY, Knox Art Gallery, July 13–Sept. 1, 1985; Corcoran Gallery of Art, New–York Historical Society...

Washington, DC, Corcoran Gallery of Art, Niagara: Two Centuries of Changing Attitudes, 1697–1901, Sept. 21–Nov. 24, 1985; Buffalo, NY, Knox Art Gallery, July 13–Sept. 1, 1985; Corcoran Gallery of Art, New–York Historical Society, Jan. 22–Apr. 27, 1986.
Sat
19
Jan
note

Elizabeth McKinsey, Niagara Falls: Icon of the American Sublime

Elizabeth McKinsey, Niagara Falls: Icon of the American Sublime (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1985).
Wed
19
Jan
note

J. Bard McNulty, ed., The Correspondence of Thomas Cole and Daniel Wadsworth

J. Bard McNulty, ed., The Correspondence of Thomas Cole and Daniel Wadsworth (Hartford: Connecticut Historical Society, 1983).
Mon
19
Jan
note

Matthew Baigell, Thomas Cole

Matthew Baigell, Thomas Cole (Watson–Guptill Publications, 1981).
Sat
19
Jan
note

Henry H. Glassie, “Thomas Cole and Niagara Falls,” New–York Historical Quarterly 58, 2

Henry H. Glassie, “Thomas Cole and Niagara Falls,” New–York Historical Quarterly 58, 2 (April 1974): 89–111.
Fri
19
Jan
exhibition

Arts Club of Chicago, The American Landscape, Nov. 14–Dec. 29, 1973, cat. 4.

Arts Club of Chicago, The American Landscape, Nov. 14–Dec. 29, 1973, cat. 4.
Fri
19
Jan
note

“Reevaluation of a Thomas Cole Painting,” Museum Studies 8

“Reevaluation of a Thomas Cole Painting,” Museum Studies 8 (1973): 96–108.
Thu
19
Jan
note

Howard S. Merritt, “A Wild Scene, Genesis of a Painting: Appendix I: Correspondence between Thomas Cole and Robert Gilmor, Jr.” Baltimore Museum of Art Annual 2

Howard S. Merritt, “A Wild Scene, Genesis of a Painting: Appendix I: Correspondence between Thomas Cole and Robert Gilmor, Jr.” Baltimore Museum of Art Annual 2 (1967): 41–81.
Sun
19
Jan
note

Louis Legrand Noble, The Life and Works of Thomas Cole

Louis Legrand Noble, The Life and Works of Thomas Cole (Belknap Press, 1964).
© Artist-Unknown. All rights reserved.