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Artist/Maker (1801 - 1848)

Italian Scene. Composition

1833
Oil on canvas
Unframed: 37 1/2 × 54 1/2 in. (95.3 × 138.4 cm)
Framed: 51 1/8 in. × 68 in. × 5 1/2 in. (129.9 × 172.7 × 14 cm)
Gift of the New-York Gallery of the Fine Arts
1858.19
Cole painted this work shortly after returning from a trip to Europe from 1829 to 1832. The artist traveled to England, France, and Italy; he spent several months in Florence and later visited Rome. Cole responded strongly to the Italian landscape and particularly to its ruins, producing numerous sketches. In 1833 he met the wealthy merchant Luman Reed, whose first commission for Cole was an Italian landscape. The artist seized the opportunity to impress his new patron with a rich mixture of the motifs that had engaged him there. Cole created a serene, harmonious composition that shows in influence of the seventeenth-century landscape painter Claude Lorrain. At the left an umbrella pine shades a ruined temple, and peasants dance before it, blissfully unaware that it signals the transitory nature of human glory. At the right a young man leans against a broken column, perhaps, with Cole, contemplating the passing of civilizations (though the artist added a comic note in the goat behind him that is trying to pull his coat down from the pillar). Beyond him is a crumbling aqueduct. In spite of signs of life in the distance, such as the small town on the lakeshore and sailboats on the water, Cole presented a somber view of Italy as an exemplar of decline. He affirmed his intentions by attaching the following verse from Samuel Rogers' poem "Italy" to the painting: "Oh Italy, how beautiful thou art! Yet I could weep, for thou art lying, alas! Low in the dust, and they who come admire thee, As we admire the beautiful in death." The artist and critic William Dunlap recalled that after seeing the painting, Reed asked Cole the price and Cole ventured, "I shall be satisfied if I receive $300, but I should be gratified if the price is fixed at $500." Reed replied, "You shall be gratified," thus beginning a liberal and productive, if all too brief, partnership. The painting was exhibited at the National Academy of Design in 1834 and received enthusiastic praise from the New York Evening Post, which called the picture "the best that has ever passed from Mr. Cole's easel," and American Monthly Magazine agreed that it was "glorious."
DescriptionAn idealized, composite view of Italian scenery in horizontal format incorporating landscape and archeological elements from both the Mediterranean coast and the Roman countryside. The dominant features of the landscape are the Roman ruins, roadside shrines, and enframing umbrella pine and cypress trees underneath a vast blue sky reflecting the artist's experience of Mediterranean light. In the left foreground, three Italian peasants, idealized as rustic primitives, dance underneath the large enframing tree.
ProvenanceLuman Reed, d. 1836; Mrs. Luman Reed, New York, 1836-44; New-York Gallery of the Fine Arts, 1844-58.
ClassificationsPAINTINGS
Collections
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