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View of a River Town with a Bridge

Jan Josephsz van Goyen

Artwork Details

View of a River Town with a Bridge
17th century
Jan Josephsz van Goyen
black chalk, gray wash on paper
11 7/16 in. x 13 3/8 in. ( 29 cm x 34 cm )
Gift from the Joseph F. McCrindle Collection
2008/2.199.5

On Display

Not currently on display

Description

*Gallery Rotation Winter 2011 (January 2011)
Jan van Goyen
The Netherlands, 1596–1656
View of a River Town with a Bridge
17th century
Black chalk and grey wash on paper
Gift from the Joseph F. McCrindle Collection, 2008/2.199.5
Van Goyen was the master of the tonal landscape and his characteristic views of rivers were fairly small in scale and employed little color. He often carried sketchbooks that allowed him to quickly capture a view, such as this cursory depiction of a river town and bridge. The artist, however, seems to have developed this small work beyond the rapid sketch; the grey wash may have been added later to augment the contrasts of shadowed and light areas.
Gallery Rotation Winter 2011:
Jan van Goyen
The Netherlands, 1596–1656
View of a River Town with a Bridge
17th century
Black chalk and grey wash on paper
Gift from the Joseph F. McCrindle Collection, 2008/2.199.5
Van Goyen was the master of the tonal landscape and his characteristic views of rivers were fairly small in scale and employed little color. He often carried sketchbooks that allowed him to quickly capture a view, such as this cursory depiction of a river town and bridge. The artist, however, seems to have developed this small work beyond the rapid sketch; the grey wash may have been added later to augment the contrasts of shadowed and light areas.

Subject Matter:

Jan van Goyen avidly sketched his surroundings in his native Holland. As one of the leading landscape painters of the seventeenth-century, his drawing was as essential part of his practice in developing subjects and compositions for his paintings. Many of his sketches, often in small sketchbooks that would fit easily into a pocket, are rapid notational indications of a scene that capture only its essential outlines. This drawing is more fully developed than such sketches, but less elaborated than van Goyen's detailed drawings for paintings. He probably made the drawing on site, working swiftly and masterfully with black chalk, and later returned to the drawing to add touches of wash to create the shadows in the water and along the riverbanks.

Physical Description:

This small sketch presents a view along a waterway that passes beneath a double-arched bridge. The triangular sail of a small boat is visible just before the bridge, moored to the quai next to some sheds. A tall church with a central steeple rises on the right bank in the foreground, and two other tall buildings punctuate the middle ground and distance. The chimneys and rooflines of humbler dwellings appear on the left bank. Despite the urban setting, only a few figures may be glimpsed, including a man crossing the bridge on horseback.

Usage Rights:

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