Pictures from Google Image Search

Thomas Cole

Encyclopedia of World Biography | 2004 | Copyright 2004 Gale, Cengage Learning. All rights reserved. (Hide copyright information) Copyright

Thomas Cole

Thomas Cole (1801-1848) was the founder of the Hudson River school of romantic American landscape painting. He treated the idyllic as well as the formidable aspects of nature in great detail and was also noted for his allegorical subjects.

Thomas Cole was born in Bolton-le-Moors, Lancaster, England, and emigrated with his family to Philadelphia in 1818. They soon moved to Steubenville, Ohio, where Thomas, who had studied engraving briefly in England, taught art in his sister's school. He then tried to be an itinerant portrait painter. Seeking better patronage, he returned to Philadelphia in 1823 to paint landscapes and decorate Japan ware. He took drawing lessons at the Pennsylvania Academy and exhibited there for the first time in 1824.

Moving to New York the following year Cole began to receive recognition and may at this time be said to have set in motion the taste for romantic landscapea genre which would later become known as the Hudson River school. Taking a trip up the Hudson River, he painted three landscapes. Placed in the window of Coleman's Art Store, they were purchased at $25 apiece by three well-known artists of the day: John Trumbull, Asher Durand, and William Dunlap. Cole was now established and able to support himself by his landscapes.

Cole moved up the Hudson in 1826 to Catskill. After seeing the great scenic wonders of the White Mountains and Niagara, he sailed for England in 1829 under the patronage of Robert Gilmore of Baltimore. Although Cole admired the paintings of Claude Lorrain and Gaspard Poussin, he spent little time in European museums, preferring to sketch out of doors. After a brief visit to Paris he went down the Rhone River and then to Italy. After nine weeks in Florence he went to Rome, accomplishing most of the journey on foot.

Returning to New York in 1832, Cole was given a commission by an art patron to execute five panels. Known as the Course of Empire, these were considerably influenced by J.M.W. Turner's Building of Carthage, which Cole had seen in London.

In November 1836 Cole married Maria Barton, whose family home in Catskill became their permanent residence. Commissions came in from William P. Van Rensselaer for The Departure and The Return, from P. G. Stuyvesant for Past and Present, and from Samuel Ward for four panels, the Voyage of Life.

In 1841 Cole went to Europe again. On returning home he visited Mount Desert on the coast of Maine and Niagara. At the time of his death on Feb. 11, 1848, he was at work on a religious allegory, the Cross of the World.

With the overland expansion of America, people took great interest in their land and the various aspects of nature. Cole established landscape painting as an accepted form of art. He was a Swedenborgian mystic, and his paintings reflect his intensely religious feelings; never dealing with the trivial, his work has a high moral tone. He had a profound reverence for nature, which he depicted sometimes in a tranquil mood and at other times in a state of violence. He makes the viewer feel man as a helpless creature overwhelmed by the all-powerful forces of nature. He frequently placed a highly detailed tree at the right or left foreground (an inheritance from baroque stage settings), and the landscape beyond unfolds as on a stage. His was a highly romanticized version of nature often overlaid with elements of fantasy and sometimes even including medieval or classical ruins.

Further Reading

In the absence of a modern study of Cole, the best source is Louis Legrand Noble, The Life and Works of Thomas Cole (1853; edited, with an introduction, by Elliot Vesell, 1964); it includes correspondence and other documents. Howard S. Merritt, Thomas Cole (1969), an exhibition catalog, includes a critical introduction. For shorter notices see Frederick A. Sweet, The Hudson River School and the Early American Landscape Tradition (1945), and Esther Seaver, ed., Thomas Cole: One Hundred Years Later (1949).

Additional Sources

Baigell, Matthew, Thomas Cole, New York: Watson-Guptill Publications, 1981.

Parry, Ellwood, The art of Thomas Cole: ambition and imagination, Newark: University of Delaware Press, 1988.

Cite this article
Pick a style below, and copy the text for your bibliography.

  • MLA
  • Chicago
  • APA

"Thomas Cole." Encyclopedia of World Biography. Thomson Gale. 2004. Encyclopedia.com. 24 Dec. 2009 <http://www.encyclopedia.com>.

"Thomas Cole." Encyclopedia of World Biography. Thomson Gale. 2004. Encyclopedia.com. (December 24, 2009). http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1G2-3404701449.html

"Thomas Cole." Encyclopedia of World Biography. Thomson Gale. 2004. Retrieved December 24, 2009 from Encyclopedia.com: http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1G2-3404701449.html

Learn more about citation styles

Related newspaper, magazine, and trade journal articles from HighBeam Research

(Including press releases, facts, information, and biographies)

Columns and pilasters.(Product Focus on Ornamentation/Plaster)
Magazine article from: Walls & Ceilings; 8/1/2004; 348 words ; ...COLUMNS Plain Roman Doric Columns and Pilasters with Roman Doric Bases complement the...this entrance hall. The columns and pilasters add weight without mass, creating a...for aesthetic value. The columns and pilasters are from the company's Authentic Replication...
The room planners How to add columns and pilasters to a home interior
Newspaper article from: The Sunday Telegraph London; 3/12/2006; 700+ words ; ...SUGGESTSAdding columns, pillars and pilasters to interiors needs to be done with...from rectangular to elephantine. A pilaster is a non- structural, shallow column or pillar set against a wall. Pilasters often frame doorways and archways...
PILASTERS AND DORMERS AND BRICK, OH MY!
Newspaper article from: The Boston Globe; 1/2/2005; ; 700+ words ; ...on the minimalist black-box theater. Oh, you prefer classical? Then you'll certainly appreciate the Greek-temple pilasters that frame that very same window wall. Maybe Victorian is your thing? How about that round tower at the corner? Or the...
220-pound stone pilaster falls off west facade of state Capitol.
Newspaper article from: Arkansas Democrat-Gazette; 2/21/2008; 283 words ; Secretary of State Charlie Daniels said Wednesday that part of a limestone pilaster on the west facade of the state Capitol has fallen from the building. (Arkansas Democrat-Gazette Northwest Edition) To read...
Columns and pilasters. (Products Focus: Ornamentation).(Brief Article)
Magazine article from: Walls & Ceilings; 6/1/2002; 505 words ; Chadsworth's 1.800.COLUMNS The company's Authentic Replication Columns, including the Premier Custom Collection and Stain Grade Wooden Columns, are made of the finest paint-grade finger-jointed lumber. Constructed for interior use and available with plain or fluted shafts. Capitals are available in
Classic on brio in Chicago: columns and pilasters, patterns and stripes--lots of stripes!--for an urban apartment .(New TRADITIONS)(Interview)
Magazine article from: House Beautiful; 12/1/2008; ; 700+ words ; [ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] LISA CREGAN: You must have been beside yourself, getting to decorate a classic prewar Chicago apartment. ALESSANDRA BRANCA: No, no, it was a concrete box! This was originally an office building. But my clients wanted detail, so we began by imagining one of those big old
Talk of the Town: PROUD OR PREJUDICED? Let's go and hug a concrete pilaster
Newspaper article from: The Independent on Sunday; 6/27/2004; ; 700+ words ; To mark the end of Architecture Week, a teaser: which London landmark does this poem describe? Rising upwards from the riverside walk, RECEDING TERRACES Match and rhyme. Tonal match with roads - rolled asphalt White Grey White Richly coffered soffits overhanging Elevation Illuminated and
Expanding on a stone classic: the construction of two expansion buildings on Utah's Capitol Hill in Salt Lake City achieved a timeless aesthetic while relying on modern technology in stone construction.(RENOVATION RESTORATION & EXPANSION)
Magazine article from: Stone World; 2/1/2005; 700+ words ; ...windows, the rhythm of the columns and pilasters, and the massive rock-pitched base...bearing granite Corinthian columns and pilasters which completely surround the original...When incorporating granite columns and pilasters on the expansion buildings, the Capitol...
Francis Cape at Murray Guy.(New York)(painting exhibition)
Magazine article from: Art in America; 11/1/2004; ; 700+ words ; ...encounter, is strong. Two Pilasters and a Seat, on the...A pair of shallow pilasters, painted a warm off...painted beam. One pilaster had a small seat appended...instructions for building a pilaster, a small set of construction...attention and, as in Two Pilasters and a Seat, the kind...
The reconstruction of the Cathedral of Noto.
Magazine article from: Construction and Building Materials; 12/1/2003; ; 700+ words ; ...deficiencies in constructive materials of pilasters, even in their capacity to support vertical...reconstruction design consists merely in new pilasters, well made with local material, the...right, in the place of the collapsed pilasters, and on the left, in substitution of...

Related entries from encyclopedias, dictionaries, and thesauruses

pilaster-strip
Book article from: A Dictionary of Architecture and Landscape Architecture pilaster-strip. Lesene or piedroit which, unlike an anta or pilaster , has no base or capital, has no entasis , and is not a true pilaster: it is a feature of Anglo-Saxon work, and with the plinths and corbel-table , frames the panels...
pilaster
Book article from: A Dictionary of Architecture and Landscape Architecture pilaster. Roman version of the anta , except that generally it...column. In most cases, and correctly, unlike antae, pilaster-shafts have entasis . Unlike a pier , a pilaster has no structural purpose, and is used to respond to...
pilaster-mass
Book article from: A Dictionary of Architecture and Landscape Architecture pilaster-mass. 1. Pier to which a pilaster is attached. 2. Pier or mass of wall with impost mouldings. 3. As pilaster-strip but more massive.
pilaster-face
Book article from: A Dictionary of Architecture and Landscape Architecture pilaster-face. Longest exposed surface of a pilaster , parallel to the wall behind.
pilaster-side
Book article from: A Dictionary of Architecture and Landscape Architecture pilaster-side. Exposed part of a pilaster at 90° to the wall to which it is attached.

For students and teachers!

Encyclopedia.com provides students and teachers facts, information, and biographies from verified, citable sources, including:

Encyclopedia.com provides students and teachers facts, information, and biographies from verified, citable sources, including: