A Winter Scene with Skaters near a Castle | |
---|---|
Artist | Hendrick Avercamp |
Year | 1608–09 |
Medium | Oil on oak |
Dimensions | 40.7 cm× 40.7 cm(16.0 in× 16.0 in) |
Location | National Gallery, London |
A Winter Scene with Skaters near a Castle is an oil-on-oak painting undertaken between 1608 and 1609 by the Dutch artist Hendrick Avercamp. [1]
As with a number of Avercamp's works, the picture is part of the Flemish tradition of painting "the harmony of human activity and the cycle of nature". [2] He was influenced in his subject by the Little Ice Age, particularly the cold winter of 1607–08, [3] and was the first of the Dutch painters to specialise in snow scenes. [4]
The painting was acquired by the National Gallery in London in 1891 and remains in its collection, as at 2020. [1] On acquisition it was square in shape, but during cleaning in 1983 it was established that Avercamp's original was circular, and the surrounding pieces were made by another artist. The gallery removed the additions. [5]
Hendrick Avercamp was a Dutch painter during the Dutch Golden Age of painting. He was one of the earliest landscape painters of the 17th-century Dutch school, he specialized in painting the Netherlands in winter. His paintings are colorful and lively, with carefully crafted images of the people in the landscape. His works give a vivid depiction of sport and leisure in the Netherlands in the beginning of the 17th century. Many of Avercamp's paintings feature people ice skating on frozen lakes.
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