
River Scene with Cottages, 1638
价格面议



作品详情
Robert W. Partridge, London
Sale, Berlin, 8th May, 1913, no 72
Dr O'Hirshmann, Amsterdam, 1939
Private Collection, California

Jan van Goyen's River Scene with Cottages (1638) dates to the year he was elected hoofdman of The Hague's Guild of Saint Luke, an honor he held again in 1640. By 1638 he had entered the tonal phase defining his most sought-after work, trading busier early compositions for the spare, atmospheric idiom synonymous with the golden age of Dutch landscape painting.
Warm golden brown deepens to umber, pale green threads the willows, and a soft haze lifts off the water. A low horizon gives most of the panel to a cloud-filled sky above a still river. A thatched cottage and dovecote tower cluster on the right bank beneath autumn trees, with a moored boat and figures at left. Van Goyen worked fast and thin on the oak panel, unifying the scene in one warm tone.
The painting is illustrated in the catalogue raisonné under no. 468, confirming its authenticity. Comparable river scenes hang in major collections, including the Rijksmuseum's The Valkhof in Nijmegen (1641), the Thyssen-Bornemisza's River Landscape with Ferry Boat and Cottages (1634), and the National Gallery's A River Landscape (1645), all sharing this low horizon and tonal palette. This panel is a fully realized expression of the vision that made van Goyen central to how we picture the Dutch countryside.

“What we have here is Jan van Goyen's view of what was there, his own poetic view of a slice of reality... [H]e teaches us to observe the beauty at the calm mouth of a river. And if Dutch people today cherish such beauties... they have to thank for that the lessons in observation that they learned from this artist.”— Dutch cultural historian and theologian H. R. Rookmaaker
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