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  • Thomas Cole
    Feb 1, 1801 - Feb 11, 1848
  • Aqueduct near Rome - Thomas Cole was an English-born American artist known for his landscape and history paintings. He is America's leading landscape painter during the first half of the nineteenth century. He is regarded as the founder of the Hudson River School, an American art movement that flourished in the mid-19th century. Cole's work is known for its romantic portrayal of the American wilderness.
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Aqueduct near Rome
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  • Aqueduct near Rome

  • Thomas Cole
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  • 1832
    Oil on canvas
    45 x 67 1/16 in. (114.3 x 170.3 cm)
    Mildred Lane Kemper Art Museum, St. Louis, Missouri, United States.

    Aqueduct near Rome is an 1832 oil painting by the English-born American artist Thomas Cole. It measures 44.5 in × 67.3 in (113 cm × 171 cm) and is the largest painting that Cole completed during his first visit to Italy in 1831–32.

    The painting was commissioned by another American tourist, Charles Lyman of Waltham, Massachusetts, where his family owned the Lyman Estate. It depicts the ruins of Aqua Claudia, which was completed in the 1st century AD near Rome. The painting was completed in Cole's studio in Florence, based on sketches made while he was visiting Rome. Many preparatory sketches are held by the Detroit Institute of Arts. The original painting was acquired in 1987 by Mildred Lane Kemper Art Museum at Washington University in St. Louis, Missouri.

    To the left of the painting is a medieval watchtower built by the Annibaldi family in the 13th century, the Tor Fiscale [it] now in the Tor Fiscale Park, Rome. A line of arches leads away to the right, across the Roman Campagna, towards the Sabine Hills and Alban Hills in the background. The 50 miles (80 km) long aqueduct has fallen into disrepair over the centuries since it was built by the ancient Romans. A skull in the left foreground alongside fallen architecture is a memento mori, mediating on time and impermanence. In the middle distance is a herder with a dog and his flock of goats, one of which stands in the right foreground.

    The painting was exhibited at the National Academy of Design in New York City in 1833, and it was engraved by James Smillie. The composition was successful, and the work was described by Nathaniel Parker Willis as "one of the finest landscapes ever painted" (published by John Macrone in 1835). The style and subject matter prefigure Cole's Course of Empire series of 1836.

    On his return to Rome in 1841–42, Cole was commissioned to paint a second slightly smaller version, 82.6 cm × 122 cm (32.5 in × 48.0 in), completed in 1843 and now held by the Wadsworth Atheneum, along with a second painting, Evening in Arcadia (1843), of similar dimensions, also in Wadsworth Atheneum. Both were bequests to the gallery by Clara Hinton Gould (Mrs Frederick Saltonstall Gould) in 1948. The 1843 version of the painting depicts a different time of day, with the goat herder in a different position, and omits the Tor Fiscale and the left portion of his 1832 painting.

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Other paintings by Thomas Cole:

The Good Shepherd
The Good Shepherd
The Hunter's Return
The Hunter's Return
A Rocky Glen (In the Shawangunks)
A Rocky Glen (In the Shawangunks)
A View near Tivoli (Morning)
A View near Tivoli (Morning)
Thomas ColeThomas Cole, (born February 1, 1801, Bolton-le-Moors, Lancashire, England—died February 11, 1848, Catskill, New York, U.S.), American Romantic landscape painter who was a founder of the Hudson River school.

Cole’s family immigrated first to Philadelphia and then settled in Steubenville, Ohio. He was trained by an itinerant portrait painter named Stein and then spent two years at the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts. In 1825 some of Cole’s landscapes in a New York shop window attracted the attention of Colonel John Trumbull and the painter Asher B. Durand. They bought his works and found him patrons, assuring his future success.

In 1826 Cole made his home in the village of Catskill, New York, on the western bank of the Hudson River. From there he frequently journeyed through the Northeast, primarily on foot, making pencil studies of the landscape. He used these sketches to compose paintings in his studio during the winter. One of Cole’s most effective landscape paintings, The Ox-Bow (1846), was the result of pencil studies that he made in Massachusetts. Cole’s scenes of the Hudson River valley, reverently recorded, echo the loneliness and mystery of the North American forests. Cole could paint direct and factual landscapes recorded in minute detail, but he was also capable of producing grandiose and dramatic imaginary vistas using bold effects of light and chiaroscuro. When the human figure appears in his works, it is always subordinate to the majesty of the surrounding landscape.

Cole spent the years 1829–32 and 1841–42 abroad, mainly in Italy. He lived in Florence with the American sculptor Horatio Greenough. When Cole returned to the United States, he painted five huge canvases for a series titled The Course of Empire (1836). These paintings are allegories on the progress of mankind based on the count de Volney’s Ruines; ou, méditations sur les révolutions des empires (1791). A second series, called The Voyage of Life (begun 1839), depicts a symbolic journey from infancy to old age in four scenes. Shortly before he died, Cole began still another series, The Cross of the World, which was of a religious nature.