Desolation, Thomas Cole from the old master collection

1 Personalize your artwork
Material More about this material
Size
Complete set or interchangeable Art Print?
Choose the color of the frame
ArtFrame comes as a simple construction kit. View self-assembly instructions.
2 Choose extra options
Acoustic material
Total price
2 128 kr
Or pay 3x 709.33 via Klarna
Preview at home
Art code 469048
Desolation, Thomas Cole by Masterful Masters
See it at home, on your wall
Download our app and enter work code 469048
Download for iOS Android
Already filled more than 325,000 walls!
4,322 customers rate us with a 4.8 / 5
Read our reviews
Get even more inspired

Buy Desolation, Thomas Cole as a reproduction on canvas, ArtFrame, poster and wallpaper, printed on demand in high quality.

About "Desolation, Thomas Cole"

About the artwork

Desolation, Thomas Cole.
Part of the series "The Course of Empire".

The fifth painting, Desolation, shows the results, decades later. We view the remains of the city in the livid light of a dying day. The landscape has begun to return to wilderness, and no humans are to be seen; but the remnants of their architecture emerge from beneath a mantle of trees, ivy, and other overgrowth. The broken stumps of the pharoses loom in the background. The arches of the shattered bridge, and the columns of the temple are still visible; a single column looms in the foreground, now a nesting place for birds. The sunrise of the first painting is mirrored here by a moonrise, a pale light reflecting in the ruin-choked river while the standing pillar reflects the last rays of sunset. This gloomy picture suggests how all empires could be after their fall. It is a harsh possible future in which humanity has been destroyed by its own hand.

This cycle reflects Cole's pessimism, and is often seen as a commentary on Andrew Jackson and the Democratic Party. (Note, for instance, the military hero at the centre of "Consummation.") However, some Democrats had a different theory of the course of empire. They saw not a spiral or cycle but a continuing upward trajectory. Levi Woodbury, a Democrat and a justice of the United States Supreme Court, for instance, responded to Cole by saying that there would be no destruction in the United States.

Old Master collections

Discover more Old Masters in the following collections:

Customer reviews

This artwork doesn't have reviews yet. 4,322 customers rate us with a 4.8 / 5

    Linda K.
    Germany
    5 / 5
    Verified review from Trusted Shops Ordered in May 2019
    Angelika J.
    Germany
    5 / 5
    Verified review from Trusted Shops Ordered in September 2019
    Joyce Smeets
    Netherlands
    5 / 5
    Verified review from Google Ordered in December 2024
    Ulrike R.
    Germany
    5 / 5
    Verified review from Trusted Shops Ordered in June 2022
    Ricarda S.
    Germany
    5 / 5
    Verified review from Trusted Shops Ordered in April 2019
    Mariska
    Netherlands
    4 / 5
    Verified review from Kiyoh Ordered in May 2022
    Joke Schuller
    Netherlands
    5 / 5
    Verified review from Kiyoh Ordered in February 2019
    M44
    Netherlands
    5 / 5
    Verified review from Kiyoh Ordered in August 2021
    Monique van de Wiel
    Netherlands
    5 / 5
    Verified review from Google Ordered in May 2025
    Rolf P.
    Germany
    5 / 5
    Verified review from Trusted Shops Ordered in February 2022
    Hanny
    Netherlands
    5 / 5
    Verified review from Kiyoh Ordered in August 2018
    S. K.
    Germany
    5 / 5
    Verified review from Trusted Shops Ordered in March 2019

About the material

ArtFrame™

Interchangeable Art Prints

  • High-quality print
  • Easily interchangeable
  • Acoustic function
  • Large sizes available

More about ArtFrame™