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Contribution to Book
Haarlem Landscapes and Ruins: Nature Transformed
Time and Transformation in Seventeenth-Century Dutch Art (2005)
  • Catherine Levesque, William & Mary
Abstract
Time and Transformation brings together a variety of seventeenth-century Dutch paintings and works on paper in a major examination of themes dealing with the transformative effects of time and circumstance. The Dutch were fascinated with this idea and the variety of motifs used to convey it. Included are images of local landscapes with medieval structures left in ruins in the wake of the Spanish wars, depictions of rustic cottages and farmhouses, Dutch Italianate landscapes with Roman ruins, and representations of accidental ruins caused by flood or fire. Non-architectural imagery, such as vanitas still lifes and depictions of ruined trees encourage broader thinking on the meanings and associations of images of the fragmentary. Among the artists included are Rembrandt, Jacob van Ruisdael, Jan van Goyen, Abraham Bloemaert, Willem Kalf, Gerard Dou, and Bartholomaus Breenberg.
Publication Date
2005
Editor
Susan Kuretsky
Publisher
Francis Lehman Loeb Art Center, University of Washington Press
ISBN
9780964426375
Citation Information
Catherine Levesque. "Haarlem Landscapes and Ruins: Nature Transformed" Poughkeepsie, New YorkTime and Transformation in Seventeenth-Century Dutch Art (2005) p. 49 - 62
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/catherine-levesque/2/