A River Scene
About this artwork
Van Goyen’s scene shows the banks of a river at a small village. The river is relatively busy with the traffic of small boats. Such rivers and waterways were vital to the success of the Dutch economy which was based on trade, as they allowed for the easy transportation of goods around the country to the major ports for export. In this scene, small steps lead up from the water to the farmhouses that line the riverbank. Here, Van Goyen departed from his normal practice of using a restricted palette, and introduced a little more colour to the scene. This is visible in the areas of blue sky peeping through the fluffy clouds.
Updated before 2020
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artist:Jan van GoyenDutch (1596 - 1656)
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title:A River Scene
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date created:Dated 1646
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materials:Oil on panel
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measurements:42.60 x 56.50 cm; Framed: 57.70 x 71.70 x 6.10 cm
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object type:
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credit line:Bequest of Mrs Mary Veitch to the RSA 1875; transferred and presented 1910
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accession number:NG 1013
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gallery:
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artwork photographed by:Antonia Reeve
Jan van Goyen
Jan van Goyen
Jan van Goyen was one of the most important and prolific seventeenth-century Dutch landscape painters. His early style reflected that of his teacher, the landscape painter Esaias van de Velde. Both artists shied away from narrative detail in their paintings, and instead focused on the effects of...