Figures on a Frozen Canal

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Figures on a Frozen Canal

Creator

Gerrit Battem

Dutch Artist · 1636–1684

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Gerrit Battem is known for his many drawings, often highly colored, of landscapes and genre scenes in bodycolor. He also may have painted some religious subjects in bodycolor. Tradition has it that he studied in Rotterdam with Abraham Furnerius, a landscape draftsman of the Rembrandt school who was related to Battem's mother. Battem might also have studied with his guardian, painter Jan Daemen Coo

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Date
1670s
Medium
Pen and brown ink and translucent and opaque watercolor
Culture
Dutch
Department
Drawings
Institution
Getty Museum

Heavy, opaque bodycolor effectively conveys the accretion of snow on the rooftops and riverbank, the dripping icicles in the trees, and the wintry cloud cover. The bodycolor's weight and solidity harmonizes with the muted brown and gray color scheme. Subtly but effectively, Gerrit Battem also added the slightest touches of vivid blue and red to animate the scene. *Figures on a Frozen Canal* belongs to a group of whimsical winter cityscapes that Battem made as independent works of art. The luminous bodycolor he chose to use may signal that he intended these drawings to resemble oil paintings. Winter landscapes with peasants had been a fixture of Netherlandish art since the time of Pieter Bruegel the Elder in the 1500s. In the early 1600s, Hendrik Avercamp continued and enlivened the tradition, packing his paintings with incidental detail and brightly colored costumes. Like his predecessor, Battem filled his scene with fun and anecdote as well as fanciful architecture and expressive, skeletonlike trees.

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