• Skip to secondary menu
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to secondary sidebar

New York Almanack

History, Natural History & the Arts

  • Email
  • Facebook
  • RSS
  • Twitter
  • Adirondacks & NNY
  • Capital-Saratoga
  • Mohawk Valley
  • Hudson Valley & Catskills
  • NYC & Long Island
  • Western NY
  • History
  • Nature & Environment
  • Arts & Culture
  • Outdoor Recreation
  • Food & Farms
  • Subscribe
  • Support
  • Submit
  • About
  • New Books
  • Events
  • Podcasts

Thomas Cole National Historic Site

Thomas Cole Historic Site Opens Mignot Exhibit

May 1, 2012 by Editorial Staff 1 Comment

Louis Rémy MignotThe Thomas Cole National Historic Site has opened a new exhibition: Worlds Between: Landscapes of Louis Rémy Mignot. Curated by Katherine E. Manthorne, this is the first major solo show of Louis Rémy Mignot (1831-1870) in over two decades. The exhibition will offer an intimate look at the work of this young, Charleston-born artist who painted in the style of the Hudson River School – and whose tragic life story is as captivating as his landscape paintings.


In this exhibition the Thomas Cole National Historic Site offers a rare chance to see a full range of Mignot’s work. The catalogue produced for the exhibit includes full-color reproductions of the paintings and an essay by Dr. Manthorne. Guest Curator Katherine Manthorne brings her expertise on traveler artists to the exhibition and accompanying catalog, which offers a fresh look at Mignot as a painter whose global journeying fed his unique artistic creativity. 

Specifically, at the Thomas Cole National Historic Site one may view Mignot’s early Dutch landscapes, subtly nuanced snow scenes, coloristic Tropical landscapes, and painterly European pictures. To celebrate the legacy he inherited from Thomas Cole, the exhibition highlights Mignot’s distinctive views of upstate New York and the Hudson River Valley. In many ways, the gallery at the Cole Site offers the perfect venue for this artist living between worlds. 

 Louis Rémy Mignot (1831-1870) lived between many worlds: he was a Southern artist living in New York City in the years leading up to the Civil War; a French-Catholic, he worked within a predominantly Anglo-Protestant community of artists; he traveled from the American South to South America, and painted both subtle snow scenes and fiery tropical pictures. He belonged to the inner circles of polar opposites – Frederic Church and James Whistler; and in his all too short career, his style moved from Hudson River School realism toward Aestheticism. 

His art and life embodied the mobility that characterized the 19th c. Atlantic world, as he moved from one busy, cosmopolitan port to another. Mignot grew up in Charleston, S.C., where the slave-holding Low Country planter elite frequented his father’s coffee house and confectionary on King Street. At age 17 he traveled to The Hague in the Netherlands for artistic training, and then moved to New York City. From there he visited tourist sites from New York’s Hudson Valley to the White Mountains in New Hampshire. In 1857 he explored South America, painting the steamy lowlands and lagoons that rivaled the Andean panoramas of his traveling companion Frederic Church. 

With the outbreak of Civil War, his southern identity and world experiences made it difficult for him either to remain in the North or to return home to Carolina, and he took up his travels again. Mignot never reached his intended destination of India, but got as far as London. Ever restless, he spent summers in the Swiss Alps and headed for Paris in 1870, where he was trapped during the Commune and contracted small pox. He died at age 39, leaving behind one of the most diverse and sophisticated bodies of work of any American landscapist. 

This is the 9th annual presentation of 19th century landscape paintings at the Thomas Cole site. The exhibition program seeks to foster discussion and understanding of the influence of Thomas Cole on American culture through a generation of artists known as the Hudson River School. Worlds Between – Landscapes of Louis Rémy Mignot will be on view until October 28, 2012. 

DIRECTIONS: The Thomas Cole Historic Site is located in the scenic Hudson River Valley, at 218 Spring Street in Catskill, New York. Located near the western entrance to the Rip Van Winkle Bridge, with easy access from the New York State Thruway exit 21 or Amtrak train service in Hudson, detailed directions and more information can be found at www.thomascole.org or call 518-943-7465. 

HOURS: Starting May 3rd, the Main House and Old Studio are open for tours from 10 to 4pm, with the last tour at 3pm, Thursday through Sunday, through October 28th. Admission to the grounds is free and open dawn until dusk.

Filed Under: Arts, History, Hudson Valley - Catskills Tagged With: Thomas Cole National Historic Site

Lecture on Thomas Cole’s ‘New Studio’ Sunday

April 18, 2012 by Editorial Staff Leave a Comment

In 1974, an Italianate building that Thomas Cole had designed and used as his painting studio in the mid-19th century was demolished. It had fallen into disrepair and the art movement that Thomas Cole had founded, the Hudson River School, had fallen out of favor. Over the years, the site was overcome with trees and shrubs, and the exact location of the former building was lost. [Read more…] about Lecture on Thomas Cole’s ‘New Studio’ Sunday

Filed Under: History, Hudson Valley - Catskills Tagged With: Art History, Greene County, Historic Preservation, Hudson River School, Thomas Cole National Historic Site

Thomas Cole Celebrates 10 Years, Makes Plans

December 15, 2011 by Editorial Staff Leave a Comment

Ten years ago the Thomas Cole National Historic Site opened its doors with no endowment, no government operating funds, and no paid staff. Thanks to members, volunteers, donors, scholars, trustees, staff, interns, advisors and fans the birthplace of the Hudson River School is still inspiring us today.

Over the next ten years Historic Site staff hope to see Thomas Cole’s “New Studio” rebuilt in the exact spot where it stood for 128 years – a building that he himself designed and the interior rooms of the 1815 “Main House” restored. [Read more…] about Thomas Cole Celebrates 10 Years, Makes Plans

Filed Under: History Tagged With: Art History, Historic Preservation, Hudson River School, Thomas Cole National Historic Site

Thomas Cole Historic Site Community Day

September 23, 2011 by Editorial Staff Leave a Comment

It has been ten years since the Thomas Cole National Historic Site opened its doors, and they have a great many milestones to celebrate, so they are opening their doors on Sunday, September 25, from 1-4 pm for a Community Day, featuring a new exhibition focusing on the past decade. Admission is free. [Read more…] about Thomas Cole Historic Site Community Day

Filed Under: History, Hudson Valley - Catskills Tagged With: Art History, Greene County, Hudson River School, Thomas Cole National Historic Site

Hudson River School Hikes Offered

June 14, 2011 by Editorial Staff 1 Comment

Thomas Cole National Historic Site is offering a third season of guided hikes to places that inspired Thomas Cole and fellow artists of the Hudson River School. Hikers will see the views that appear in some of the most beloved landscape paintings of the 19th-century, and hear stories that bring their history to life. [Read more…] about Hudson River School Hikes Offered

Filed Under: History Tagged With: Art History, Hudson River, Hudson River School, Natural History, Thomas Cole National Historic Site

New Exhibit: Landscape Painter Robert Duncanson

April 11, 2011 by Editorial Staff Leave a Comment

On May 1, 2011, the Thomas Cole National Historic Site opens Robert S. Duncanson: The Spiritual Striving of the Freedman’s Son, the first exhibition featuring the work of the nineteenth-century African-American landscape painter Robert S. Duncanson in many years, and, the first exhibition of his work to appear on the east coast, even in his lifetime. The exhibition will bring the work of this Ohio artist to the home of Thomas Cole, the founder of the Hudson River School and major influence on Duncanson. [Read more…] about New Exhibit: Landscape Painter Robert Duncanson

Filed Under: History, New Exhibits Tagged With: African American History, Art History, Hudson River School, Thomas Cole National Historic Site

Fort Ticonderoga Receives Art Exhibit Grant

December 29, 2010 by Editorial Staff Leave a Comment

Fort Ticonderoga has been awarded a grant in the amount of $3,000 by The Felicia Fund, Inc. of Providence, Rhode Island. The funds will support the upcoming exhibit, The Art of War: Ticonderoga as Experienced through the Eyes of America’s Great Artists exhibit. The new exhibit, scheduled to open in May 2011, will feature fifty works from Fort Ticonderoga’s extensive art collection together for the first time in a single exhibition. Included will be important American works by Thomas Davies, Thomas Cole, and Daniel Huntington. [Read more…] about Fort Ticonderoga Receives Art Exhibit Grant

Filed Under: History, New Exhibits Tagged With: Art History, Essex County, Fort Ticonderoga, Grants, Military History, Thomas Cole National Historic Site

The Masculinity of Antebellum Landscape Painters

September 27, 2010 by Editorial Staff Leave a Comment

As one who hobnobbed in elite cultural circles but also worked with his hands and roughed it in the woods and mountains, was the antebellum American landscape painter to be a gentleman or an undomesticated wild man, a James Fenimore Cooper or a Davy Crockett?

Join Dr. Sarah Burns, Ruth N. Halls Professor of Fine Arts at Indiana University, as she examines the ways in which Hudson River School painters attempted to reckon with the problematic aura of femininity that clung to the image of the artist at that time. [Read more…] about The Masculinity of Antebellum Landscape Painters

Filed Under: History, Hudson Valley - Catskills Tagged With: Art History, Gender History, Greene County, Hudson River School, Thomas Cole National Historic Site

Thomas Cole’s ‘New Studio’ Plans Revealed

September 1, 2010 by Editorial Staff 1 Comment

There will be a party at Thomas Cole’s home in Catskill with cocktails on the lawn followed by dinner at one of several magnificent river-front homes nearby on Saturday September 11, 6pm. The event is a fundraiser, and the newly completed architectural drawings for Thomas Cole’s “New Studio” will be unveiled.

The building was designed by Cole and built in 1846, but was demolished in 1973. The original stone foundation has been unearthed, and the fascinating archaeological site will be on view. [Read more…] about Thomas Cole’s ‘New Studio’ Plans Revealed

Filed Under: History, Hudson Valley - Catskills Tagged With: Archaeology, Architecture, Art History, Catskills, Greene County, Historic Preservation, Thomas Cole National Historic Site

Celebrating Women of the Hudson River School

March 21, 2010 by Editorial Staff Leave a Comment

The Thomas Cole National Historic Site will present “Remember the Ladies: Women Artists of the Hudson River School”, believed to be the first exhibition ever to focus solely on women artists associated with the 19th century landscape painting movement. The exhibition, which opens on May 8, 2010 is co-curated by Jennifer C. Krieger, of Hawthorne Fine Art in Manhattan and Nancy Siegel, Associate Professor of Art History at Towson University, Towson, MD. [Read more…] about Celebrating Women of the Hudson River School

Filed Under: History, New Exhibits Tagged With: Art History, Hudson River, Thomas Cole National Historic Site

  • « Go to Previous Page
  • Go to page 1
  • Go to page 2
  • Go to page 3
  • Go to page 4
  • Go to Next Page »

Primary Sidebar

Help Us Reach Our Fundraising Goal

Subscribe to New York Almanack

Subscribe! Follow the New York Almanack each day via E-mail, RSS, Twitter or Facebook updates.

Recent Comments

  • Mary Anne Goley on James Hazen Hyde: A Gilded Age Scandal
  • Bob Meyer on Poetry: Little Boy Lost
  • Editorial Staff on New York’s Pirate Utopia: From Pearl Street to Execution Dock
  • Beth Law on History Mystery: What Happened To Solomon Northup?
  • J Hans on New York’s Pirate Utopia: From Pearl Street to Execution Dock
  • David Griffin on Lost British Forts of Long Island
  • David Griffin on Lost British Forts of Long Island
  • Olivia Twine on Bobcat Dispersal: When The Kittens Leave Home
  • Tom Tkachuk on Bates Tavern: A Lost Oneida County Landmark
  • Thomas Clemens on Corinth, Hudson River, Palmer Falls Talk Tonight

Recent New York Books

rebuilding the republic
The 20th Century Civil Rights Movement
first principles
An American Marriage
too long ago
the long year of the revolution
Notable New Yorkers of Manhattans Upper West Side
Woman Slaveholders in Jamaica
nobody hitchhikes anymore
Too Long Ago Amsterdam

Secondary Sidebar

New York State Historic Markers