
Cleveland Museum of Art
The Manor House, Cresswells
Hendrick Danckerts
- Date
- c. 1665
- Medium
- Pen, ink, wash with watercolor on two conjoined pieces of paper
- Culture
- Netherlands
- Department
- Drawings
- Institution
- Cleveland Museum of Art
The Anglo-Dutch painter, Hendrick Danckert, made this panoramic view of the manor house at Cresswells, Bray, in Berkshire, England around 1670. The drawing was preparatory for a painting of the house, presumably commissioned by its owner, Henry Somerset, 1st Duke of Beaufort. The genre of topographical painting that flourished in England beginning in the 17th century accompanied the building boom after the Restoration (1660), which was funded in large part by the American colonies. Many Dutch artists, trained in landscape painting in their native country, emigrated to England to meet the demand. Danckerts was among the first to incorporate watercolor into his drawings, a genre that would flourish in England in the following centuries. The timber-framed house depicted here was built in the fifteenth century and demolished in the eighteenth century.
The authoritative record is held by Cleveland Museum of Art. LinkedCulture surfaces this object and its connections; it does not alter institutional metadata.
Related across collections
Semantically similar works from Cleveland Museum of Art and other institutions.

Sketchbook: Derbyshire and Sussex
Minneapolis Institute of Art

Bridgenorth, Shropshire
Cleveland Museum of Art

Neath Abbey
Cleveland Museum of Art

Carving from an Overmantel
Cleveland Museum of Art

Carving from an Overmantel
Cleveland Museum of Art

Carving from an Overmantel
Cleveland Museum of Art

Carving from an Overmantel
Cleveland Museum of Art

Carving from an Overmantel
Cleveland Museum of Art

Landscape
Getty Museum

Overmantel Decoration
Cleveland Museum of Art

View of Windsor from the River
Minneapolis Institute of Art

Carving from an Overmantel
Cleveland Museum of Art