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Dutch Painting

Landscape with Open Gate

Pieter Molijn
c. 1630
Oil on panel, 33.6 x 47.9 cm.
National Gallery of Art, Washington D.C.
Pieter Molijn

Pieter MOLIJN
Born 1595, Died 1661
Draftsman, Painter, Printmaker

When Pieter Molijn moved to Holland is unknown, but he made Haarlem his home for life. He joined Haarlem's guild of Saint Luke in 1616 and served as its dean in 1633, 1638, and 1646. Molijn's early landscape style was strongly influenced by the realism of Esaias van de Velde and his pupil Jan van Goyen, who were both in Haarlem for a short period after Molijn's arrival. Works by Molijn, van Goyen, and Salomon van Ruisdael represent the climax of pictorial realism in Dutch landscape painting. These artists eliminated the ornamental foliage and glittering highlights of their Mannerist predecessors. Molijn's most innovative period was the 1620s. In depicting the dunes and the flat countryside around Haarlem, rather than dividing the landscape into separate realms as was common practice, he subordinated scattered details to large areas of light and shadow and unified the scene by prominent diagonals leading the eye into the distance. During his maturity, Molijn was more active as a draftsman than as a painter. Most of his lively chalk landscape drawings, which are usually signed and dated, were apparently meant to be finished works, not preliminary studies for paintings.

from:
Getty Museum

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