Ecuadorian landscape with people, palm trees, waterfall, and volcano in background.

View of Cotopaxi

Frederic Edwin Church

1857

View of Cotopaxi brings together in visual form scientific, religious, political, and cultural ideas in the mid-19th century. Inspired by German naturalist Alexander von Humboldt’s concept of ecological interconnectedness, Frederic Edwin Church traveled to South America to meticulously study the tropical landscape. The artist produced at least ten finished paintings of the Ecuadorian volcano, this one completed in his studio just before his second visit to the region. For Church and other Christian viewers, nature, with all its creative and destructive wonders, was evidence of divine power. The painting likewise reflected an imperialist vision, as US government officials eyed Latin America as a site for territorial expansion and conquest.

Title View of Cotopaxi
Artist Frederic Edwin Church
Date 1857
Medium Oil on canvas
Style 19th century
Dimensions 62.2 × 92.7 cm (24 1/2 × 36 1/2 in.)