Wooded Landscape

Getty Museum

Wooded Landscape

Creator

Paulus van Liender

Dutch Artist · 1731–1797

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Unlike many Dutch artists of the 1700s who remained attached to a style they developed at the outset of their career, Paulus van Liender's art continually evolved. His earliest works were traditional topographic views but by the 1780s he was producing distinctive forest interiors. The scion of an artistic family, Van Liender trained initially with his uncle Jacobus, an enthusiastic amateur draftsm

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Date
about 1780–1790
Medium
Pen and gray ink and wash over black chalk
Culture
Dutch
Department
Drawings
Institution
Getty Museum

A colossal tree extending beyond the top of the sheet dominates this forest interior. The tree bends sharply leftward, its craggy branches forming a decorative canopy of leaves. To its left, a more modestly scaled and more lightly rendered tree almost appears to recoil away from its towering companion. But even the smallest trees reach well above the cluster of peasants standing in front of a thatched roof cottage. One figure in this group points toward the luminous glade in the middle distance. Near the end of his career, Paulus van Liender produced a series of drawings of wooded landscapes, including this large work, for which he became best known. The forests around Utrecht and Haarlem could have inspired this work of art but the careful arrangement of trees and foliage and decorative patterning of light and shadow, suggest that the scene was a product of Van Liender's imagination.

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