Jacob van Ruisdael was the most innovative and versatile Dutch landscapist of the seventeenth century. In the 1660s, he painted a number of vertically oriented landscapes with waterfalls that evoke a Scandinavian wilderness. Although Dutch merchants acquired raw materials — timber for shipbuilding and iron ore for munitions — from Norway and Sweden, to most residents of the Low Countries the terrain depicted here must have looked strange and forbidding. Ruisdael never visited Scandinavia, but invented these views based on his knowledge of works by Allart van Everdingen, an artist who had traveled in Sweden and Norway in 1644 and made a career of depicting Nordic scenery.

Object Number
1953.2

People
Jacob van Ruisdael, Dutch (Haarlem 1628/29 - 1682 Amsterdam)

Title
Waterfall with a Half-Timbered House and Castle

Other Titles
Alternate Title: A Waterfall with a Castle and a Cottage

Classification
Paintings

Work Type
painting

Date
c. 1665-1670

Places
Creation Place: Europe, Netherlands

Culture
Dutch

Persistent Link
https://hvrd.art/o/299988

Identification and Creation
Story
Exhibition View
Introduction
Publication
Other Information
image 6
On Display
image 9
Title Waterfall with a Half-Timbered House and Castle
Date
c. 1665-1670
Author Jacob van Ruisdael, Dutch (Haarlem 1628/29 - 1682 Amsterdam)
icons