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Course of Empire

Thomas Cole’s . Course of Empire. A romantic Lesson in CCOT. The savage state. The savage state Decoded.

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Course of Empire

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  1. Thomas Cole’s Course of Empire A romantic Lesson in CCOT

  2. The savage state

  3. The savage state Decoded 1. This mountain appears in every painting of The Course of Empire. Here, Cole places it in the center of the composition, surrounded by storm clouds. Its powerful form suggests that nature is supreme in the savage state. The enormous boulder balanced on its peak may signify the precarious state of humankind in relation to all-powerful nature. 2. Cole's conception of "primitive" man is a nomadic hunter, with a bow and arrow, pursuing a deer. 3. A deer, injured by the man's arrow, attempts to flee. This is an indication of man's efforts to dominate nature, a theme played out in the subsequent paintings in the series. 4. This ghostly figure of a hunter is a pentimento (from the Italian word pentirsi, meaning "to repent"). This form reveals traces of a previous idea about the placement of figures in The Savage State. Cole changed his mind about this figure and painted it over, but now that the pigments have aged, evidence of the artist's original thoughts about the composition reappear.  5. In this encampment with teepees, native people dance around a fire. The circular form of the teepees recalls Cole's Scene from "The Last of the Mohicans," Cora Kneeling at the Feet of Tamenund, inspired by James Fenimore Cooper's novel. 6. Storm clouds symbolize the wildness of nature. 7. Primitive canoes are an allusion to the beginning of transportation and exploration. 8. In the hunter-gatherer stage, men have banded together for the mutual necessities of protection, sustenance, and worship.

  4. The pastoral state

  5. The pastoral state Decoded 1. The mountain first seen in The Savage State is now more subdued than in the initial painting of the series. 2. A Stonehenge-like structure signifies the beginning of monumental architecture and religion. 3. A farmer replaces the hunter-gather: a sign of permanent settlement. 4. An old man draws figures in the dirt, symbolizing the beginning of science and logic. 5. A young boy draws a primitive stick figure of the woman holding a spinning distaff, symbolizing the origins of drawing and painting. Look closely and you will see Cole’s initials on the bridge below the boy. 6. A tree stump, clearly cut by humans, is a disquieting harbinger of things to come. (Cole often used cut stumps to comment on the negative effects of civilization.) 7. Men and women dancing indicate the beginning of music. 8. A permanent settlement replaces the teepees of The Savage State. Smoke billowing out of the houses suggests human control over nature for domestic purposes. 9. Two mounted horsemen not only allude to human control over animals, but also to future military development. 10. The primitive canoes of The Savage State have evolved into more advanced ships, foreshadowing the beginnings of sea trade and imperial expansion. 11. A woman in classical drapery, carrying a spindle and distaff (a rod for winding thread), may be identified as the mythological figure Clotho, spinner of fate. 12. A boy tends his flock of sheep. The presence of sheep signifies a type of landscape depiction known as the pastoral. 13. The presence, left of center, of a soldier in armor presages the coming of military conflict.

  6. The consummation of empire

  7. The consummation of empire Decoded 1. Manmade structures now cover the mountain, which is completely subject to human domination. 2. The Greek Doric temple contains pediment sculptures depicting a hunting scene like that in The Savage State. Cole copied the central figure of Diana, Roman goddess of the hunt, from the Hellenistic sculpture Diana of Versailles, which he would have seen in Paris. 3. The 1830s saw a period of intense debate between the populist Democratic party and the elitist Federalist party over how the United States should be governed. Cole, who identified strongly with his aristocratic patrons, supported the Federalists. Some historians believe that this image of a grandiose ruler entering the city in an elephant-drawn car may be an unflattering allusion to the then-current Democratic president, Andrew Jackson. 4. Spears and other military garb suggest a thoroughly militarized society. 5. The statue of Athena symbolizes war and victory. 6. A philosopher stands surveying the scene. Cole's signature carved into the stone suggests that he identified with this figure's detached observation. 7. The potted plant symbolizes human control over nature. The vase is modeled after a Greek vessel known as the Borghese Vase, in the collection of the Louvre, which Cole may have seen in Europe. 8. The two boys prefigure events to come: while it appears that the children are playing amicably, the older boy is actually sinking his playmate's toy ship. 9. A scholar records history as it happens, parallel to Cole's role in creating another kind of record through pictures. 10. A fountain represents human manipulation and diminishment of the natural elements. 11. Brass trumpets replace the simple flutes of the pastoral state, suggesting a shrill and overblown quality to the cultural developments of the era.

  8. destruction

  9. destruction Decoded 1. The mountain becomes more visible again, asserting the return of nature. 2. Nature echoes the chaos of the empire's destruction in the form of storm clouds, wind, and fire. 3. The porch of the Doric temple becomes the base for a catapult, indicating that the violence of civilization has corrupted art and religion. 4. The bridge that once supported the decadent ruler collapses under the weight of the armies. 5. The ships that once promoted trade and exploration now burn and sink in the throes of war. 6. The sculpture of an armed warrior is modeled after another work in the Louvre: the Borghese Gladiator. 7. A mother mourns the loss of her son. Theodore Géricault's painting Raft of the Medusa (1819) may have inspired this detail. 8. A woman fleeing from a soldier throws herself into the harbor, indicating the collapse of civilization into sexual violence. 9. The painter's signature on the pedestal suggests Cole's alliance with the arts.

  10. desolation

  11. desolation Decoded 1. Now that civilization has fallen, the mountain has returned to its natural state and is reestablished as a key feature in the scene. 2. The moon confirms the time of day as evening, thus completing the cycle begun with The Savage State at dawn. 3. A bird builds a nest on top of a column once supporting a temple or palace, while her mate drinks from the pool of water below. This twosome may be an allusion to the pairs of animals that survived the Biblical flood. 4. Nature is slowly reclaiming the ruins of the empire, and although this is a sign of civilization's end, the architectural fragments have a melancholy beauty. 5. First seen being hunted in the Savage State, and then depicted in a frozen state in the frieze from Consummation, deer now freely roam the landscape. 6. The remnants of the frieze in the Doric temple of Consummation signify that nature's cycles are more powerful than anything constructed by human hands, no matter how exquisite or refined.

  12. A series of pictures might be painted that should illustrate the History of a natural scene, as well as be an Epitome of Man—showing the natural changes of Landscape & those effected by man in his progress from Barbarism to Civilization, to Luxury, the Vicious state or state of destruction and to the state of Ruin & Desolation. The philosophy of my subject is drawn from the history of the past, wherein we see how nations have risen from the Savage state to that of Power & Glory & then fallen & become extinct… — Thomas Cole to his friend, LumanReed, 18 September 1833 http://www.explorethomascole.org/tour

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