Landscape with Draughtsmen
attributed to
Herman van Swanevelt
(Dutch, ca. 1600–1655)
Date1629–38
MediumPen and brown ink on paper
DimensionsImage/Sheet: 8 9/16 × 12 1/16 in. (21.7 × 30.6 cm)
Credit LineCharles F. Olney Fund
Object number1964.34
Status
Not on viewThis drawing has long puzzled experts. One unusual feature is the variety of media employed by the artist: the use of chalk or graphite to first lay out the composition, and the later application of pen and brown ink, indicate that the artist may have copied a preexisting image. Another unusual element is the two figures in the left-hand foreground. Rather than an integral part of the composition, they appear to have been added on top of the already-executed landscape.
Who are these figures and why were they added to the scene? The one on the left holds a palette, suggesting that they are artists who have gone out into the countryside to document this bucolic vista, in which a lone figure labors in the distance.
The practice of painting outdoors (en plein air) was more common in the late 1800s among Impressionist artists than it was in the 1600s. The inclusion of these figures—either by the original artist or by a later one—hints at a discomfort with an independent landscape lacking any human narrative. It also reveals a desire to center the role of humans as actors in—and interpreters of—the natural world.
Exhibition History
Who are these figures and why were they added to the scene? The one on the left holds a palette, suggesting that they are artists who have gone out into the countryside to document this bucolic vista, in which a lone figure labors in the distance.
The practice of painting outdoors (en plein air) was more common in the late 1800s among Impressionist artists than it was in the 1600s. The inclusion of these figures—either by the original artist or by a later one—hints at a discomfort with an independent landscape lacking any human narrative. It also reveals a desire to center the role of humans as actors in—and interpreters of—the natural world.
Working Drawings
- Allen Memorial Art Museum, Oberlin, OH (February 24, 1981 - April 27, 1981 )
Seventeenth-Century Prints and Drawings from the Collection
- Allen Memorial Art Museum, Oberlin, OH (September 13, 1988 - November 27, 1988 )
Setting the Scene: Landscaping in Prints and Drawings from the 16th through the 19th Centuries
- Allen Memorial Art Museum, Oberlin, OH (September 10, 1993 - November 7, 1993 )
On Line: European Drawings, 16th-19th Centuries
- Allen Memorial Art Museum, Oberlin, OH (September 18, 2007 - January 27, 2008 )
Picturing the Land
- Allen Memorial Art Museum, Oberlin, OH (February 9, 2021 - August 13, 2021 )
Collections
- European
This record was created from historic documentation and may not have been reviewed by a curator. Noticed a mistake? Have some extra information about this object?
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mid-17th century
1676–99
after 1631