Monday, June 15, 2026

Artist of the Day, June 15, 2026 : Jacob van Ruisdael, a Dutch painter (#2553)

 Jacob van Ruisdael (1628 - 1682) was a Baroque artist often regarded as one of the greatest Dutch landscape painters. His subjects and style varied throughout his career, leading to a dynamic oeuvre that comprises around 700 paintings, 100 drawings, and several etchings.

Ruisdael was probably the pupil of his father, the frame maker and artist Isaak de Goyer, who later called himself Ruysdael. None of Isaak’s paintings have been identified with certainty, and it is impossible to determine the nature and extent of his influence on his son’s art. Ruisdael’s earliest works are dated 1646, and the influence of Cornelis Vroom, another Haarlem landscapist, is often noticeable. Two years later Ruisdael became a member of the Guild of St. Luke in Haarlem. From 1650 to 1653 he traveled extensively in the Netherlands and the neighbouring parts of western Germany. About 1655 he settled in Amsterdam, of which he became a free citizen in 1659. Meindert Hobbema was his most famous pupil and follower.

Ruisdael’s early work, such as Peasant Cottage in a Landscape reflects his obsession with trees. Earlier Dutch artists used trees merely as decorative compositional devices, but Ruisdael made them the subject of his paintings and imbued them with forceful personalities. His draftsmanship was meticulously precise and enriched by thick impasto, which adds depth and character to the foliage and trunks of his trees.

After 1650 the monumentality of his landscapes increases. In his view of Waterfall with Bentheim Castle Beyond, the forms become more massive, the colours more vibrant, and the composition more concentrated. The latter quality is even more evident in his famous Jewish Cemetery, which is one of his most masterly compositions. All motifs of secondary importance serve as accessories to the main motif, three ruined tombs. Some scholars have suggested that the painting symbolizes the transience of temporal things.

After 1656 Ruisdael’s compositions become more spacious and his palette brighter. His paintings of waterfalls and his Marsh recall his earlier interest in forest scenes. But more often his late works—such as the The Windmill at Wijk bij Duurstede, Wheat Fields, and his numerous views of Haarlem—display panoramas of the flat Dutch countryside. The horizon is invariably low and distant and dominated by a vast, clouded sky. Sometimes the small figures in his pictures were added by other artists, such as Adriaen van de Velde, Johannes Lingelbach, Philips Wouwerman, and Claes Berchem. Ruisdael also produced several delicately finished etchings, one of the most famous of which is The Wheat Field.

© 2026. All content on this blog is protected by international copyright laws All images are copyrighted © by VisualDiplomacy or assignee. Apart from fair dealing for the purpose of private study, research, criticism or review as permitted under the Copyright Act, the use of any image from this site is prohibited unless prior written permission is obtained. All images used for illustrative purposes only



Jacob van Ruisdael
A Bleaching Ground in a Hollow by a Cottage, 1645-50
Wooded Dunes, 1646
A Cottage and a Hayrick by a River, 1646-47
A Road winding between Trees towards a Distant Cottage, 1646-47
Dunes by the Sea, 1648
View of Egmond aan Zee, 1650
Landscape with Windmills near Haarlem, 1650-53
Two Watermills and an Open Sluice at Singraven, 1650-52
The Ruins of the Gate of Huis ter Kleef near Haarlem, 1650-53
Entrance Gate of the Castle of Brederode, 1650-55
Ruins in a Dune Landscape, 1650-55
View of Bentheim Castle, 1650-55
Bentheim Castle, 1653
A Landscape with a Ruined Building at the Foot of a Hill by a River, 1655
Extensive Landscape with Ruins, 1655-75
Landscape with Castle Bentheim, 1656
Vessels in a Fresh Breeze, 1660-65
A Waterfall in a Rocky Landscape, 1660-70
Winter Landscape with a Watermill, 1660's
A Castle on a Hill by a River, 1665-70
A Panoramic View of Amsterdam looking towards the IJ, 1665-70
A Torrent in a Mountainous Landscape, 1665-70
A Waterfall at the Foot of a Hill, near a Village, 1665-70
Waterfall in a Mountainous Landscape with a Ruined Castle, 1665–70
The Windmill at Wijk bij Duurstede, 1670
Winter Landscape, 1670
View of Haarlem with Bleaching Fields, 1670-75
The Shore at Egmond-aan-Zee, 1675
A Road leading into a Wood, 1675-80

Saturday, June 13, 2026

Artist of the Day, June 13, 2026 : Antoine Joseph Wiertz, a Belgian painter (#2552)

 Antoine Joseph Wiertz (1806–1865) was a Belgian painter, one of the great eccentrics in the history of art. In 1832 he won the Belgian Prix de Rome and when he visited Italy in 1834 he was overwhelmed by Michelangelo. His other great artistic hero was Rubens and he tried to follow in their footsteps with enormous and high-flown religious, historical, and allegorical canvases. 

The results now seem almost dementedly bombastic and melodramatic, but he had many admirers among his countrymen. The Belgian government was keen to promote a national school of painting and in 1850–1 built him a special studio in Brussels (now the Musée Wiertz). He worked there in isolation for the rest of his life, regarding himself as an artist-philosopher and totally convinced of his own genius. Some of his work is erotic or macabre in character and presages Belgian Symbolism 

Confliction opinion
For a painter/sculptor who is still largely unrecognised outside his native Belgium, Antoine Joseph Wiertz Self Portrait certainly divides opinion. The art dictionaries and encylopedias that bother to mention him in their brief entries variously describe his work as banal, melodramatic, morbid, mystical, ambitious. Opinions about the artist himself are equally conflicting, ranging from visionary, eccentric, to meglomaniacal. 

Magical Eroticism 
The work chosen to lead one into this shadowy world is The Young Witch (aka The Young Sorceress; La jeune Sorcière) of 1857. Wiertz's painting is suitably charged with a combination of innocence, overt sexuality, grotesquerie, and supernatural danger. Those lecherous faces in the top left corner remind us that we too are voyeurs of this curious scene, lit by the voluptuous fleshtones of Wiertz's nubile temptress, who is provocatively 'penetrated' by that thrusting, phallic broomstick. The tension arising from the artist's cunning juxtaposition of painterly classicism and somewhat crude titillation invests the work with a striking, magical eroticism. 

Extreme States of consciousness 
A second encounter with Wiertz's work came via another book cover - the 1978 Penguin Classics edition of Lautréamont's Maldoror and Poems. This time the painting was The Premature Burial (aka Buried Alive; Inhumation précipitée) of 1854. Art commentator, Jeffery Howe, suggests that Wiertz was inspired by Edgar Allan Poe, in whose fiction premature burial is a recurring theme 

© 2026. All content on this blog is protected by international copyright laws All images are copyrighted © by Antoine Joseph Wiertz or assignee. Apart from fair dealing for the purpose of private study, research, criticism or review as permitted under the Copyright Act, the use of any image from this site is prohibited unless prior written permission is obtained. All images used for illustrative purposes only




 Antoine Joseph Wiertz Autoportrait, c.1835-36
Double portrait of the artist and his father
Allegory with Skull, c.1824
La mère de l'artiste, c.1832
Greeks and Trojans Fighting over the Body of Patroclus, c.1836
Esmeralda, c.1839
Quasimodo, c.1839
The Fable of the Three Wishes — Human Insatiability, c.1839
Le jeune Noir, c.1840-45
La chute des mauvais anges c.1842
La jolie jardinière, c.1845-50
Portrait de Monsieur Greindl, c.1845-50
Portrait de Madame Greindl, c.1845-50
Etude pour "Confidence" c.1846
The confidence, c.1848
The beautiful Rosine, c.1847
Amours et Papillon, c.1848-50
Les Partis jugés par le Christ, c.1850-55
Hunger, Madness, Crime, c.1853
La liseuse de romans, c.1853
The premature burial, c.1854
The crucifixion of Peter, c.1855
La jeune sorcière, c.1857
Etude pour "On se retrouve au ciel" c.1859
Portrait de Maria Merten, c.1860
The Triumph of Light, c.1862
A Scene from Hell, c.1864
Civilization in the 19th Century, c.1864
Le bouton de rose, c.1864