Thomas Cole, River in the Catskills, 1843
Source: Wikimedia Commons
What was the first appearance of a train in a painting? Most people know Turner's Rain, Steam and Speed (1844), which is the earliest example listed on a Wikipedia page dedicated to railways and art. However, visitors to the National Gallery's Thomas Cole exhibition will see an earlier one in the painting reproduced above, River in the Catskills (1843). At the scale you're reading this you probably can't see the train, just a faint puff of steam in an idyllic landscape. But the railroad is in place and there are other signs too that the landscape is being changed - in the foreground men are chopping down trees. At the exhibition this painting is juxtaposed with a similar view painted in the 1830s, showing a vision of America unsullied. A baby reaches for the bouquet of wild flowers her mother has picked and on the gentle river an Indian canoe suggests a world of harmonious coexistence. However, as the curators point out, not everyone regretted the way things were going - there is a third view of this river by Asher Brown Durand, painted in 1853, with unmistakable signs of alteration and 'development', entitled Progress (The Advance of Civilisation).
Detail of River in the Catskills showing the train
Source: Museum of Fine Arts, Boston
Thomas Cole, View on the Catskill – Early Autumn, 1836-7
Source: Wikimedia Commons
Detail of View on the Catskill
Source: Wikimedia Commons
It would probably take too long to write here about the main subject of the National Gallery's exhibition, Cole's series of paintings charting The Course of Empire, or about their simultaneous Ed Ruscha show that updates the theme and raises questions about contemporary America. You can read about these in various online reviews - e.g. Jonathan Jones, Waldemar Janusczcak, Michael Glover. Instead I will just add a few words more on Cole's remarkable painting Titan's Goblet which normally hangs in the Met, where its curators admit that it 'defies explanation'. This huge stone goblet is higher than the surrounding mountains and along its rim there are is a flourishing civilisation. Water falls like divine light onto the ground far below, where there are also signs of habitation but of a more primitive kind. That small sunlit sea, framed by the goblet's rim, is a landscape-within-a-landscape. But it could also be viewed as an unusual example of the hybrid genre I discussed in connection with Tacita Dean recently, the still-life-within-a-landscape. You can lose yourself in most of Cole's paintings but this is particularly true here. His friend Louis Legrand Noble saw a kind of Mediterranean in those waters, where tourists might travel to versions of Greece or Syria, tracing their fancies in 'in the golden splendours of a summer sunset.'
Thomas Cole, Titan's Goblet, 1833
Source: Wikimedia Commons
Detail of Titan's Goblet
Source: Wikimedia Commons
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