
Minneapolis Institute of Art
The Grazing Cow
Paulus Potter
- Date
- c. 1650
- Medium
- Etching
- Department
- European Art
- Institution
- Minneapolis Institute of Art
Paulus Potter was among the most prominent of the many artists who specialized in depicting animals in 17th-century Holland. The Grazing Cow is typical of his work. Its low vantage point imparts monumentality to his subject. Here the cow seems to tower above the steeple of a village church. Raking light produces dramatic shadows that reveal the beast’s complex anatomy, which takes on architectural force. The great mass of the body is suspended from a clearly defined superstructure of bones. The shadows themselves are described with the utmost delicacy and variety. Some have said that Potter’s art is devoted to light as much as it is to animals. Netherlands, Europe
The authoritative record is held by Minneapolis Institute of Art. LinkedCulture surfaces this object and its connections; it does not alter institutional metadata.
Related across collections
Semantically similar works from Minneapolis Institute of Art and other institutions.
Two Cows and a Young Bull beside a Fence in a Meadow
Art Institute of Chicago

Cows in a Meadow near a Farm
Rijksmuseum

A Cow Grazing
Getty Museum
The Grazing Cow, from Various Oxen and Cows
Art Institute of Chicago
The Grazing Cow
Harvard Art Museums

A Landscape with a Herd of Pigs, The Swineherd Conversing with Another Man
Minneapolis Institute of Art
The Shepherd
Art Institute of Chicago
The Bull
Art Institute of Chicago
Two Bulls Fighting
Art Institute of Chicago

Cows and Sheep in a Pasture
Minneapolis Institute of Art

A Cow in a Shed
Rijksmuseum

The cow lying down near a tree
Cleveland Museum of Art