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Winter Scene

“Winter Scene” by Hendrik Meyer (Dutch, 1744-1793)

Here is one of my favorite paintings in the collection of Los Angeles’s Getty Center. I thought it would be my tribute to the icy winter storms of 2026 (even though I, in Southern California, dis not experience them). According to the Getty website:

Hendrik Meyer illustrated the subject of this watercolor–an idealized version of winter in a Dutch village–in great detail. A barren tree rendered in crisp lines and white highlights, dominates the foreground. The sky is filled with gray clouds, smoke pours from a cottage chimney, and a nearby stream is frozen over. A partially submerged rowboat is covered with snow and ice. Despite the frigid weather, people are outside, keeping warm with activities such as chopping and gathering wood, sledding, and ice-skating. Other elements in the scene also suggest movement: a windmill, chimney smoke, and birds circling or flying in formation. The landscape is filled with delicate textures: grass peeking through snow, a thatched roof, and skaters’ trails on ice.

Meyer’s figured landscapes were produced as finished works for sale. They revived a seventeenth-century tradition of such scenes, hearkening back to Dutch painters such as Pieter Bruegel the Elder, as well as calendar illustrations in medieval books of hours. Artists represented times of the year by showing people engaged in seasonal activities. Winter depictions often featured peasants felling trees, gathering wood, and ice-skating.

I have always loved Dutch painting of the 17th and 18th centuries. Martine and I visited the Rijksmuseum in Amsterdam over twenty years ago featuring Dutch painters of the Golden Age. The exhibit, and the exhibition catalog, has had a major influence on my appreciation of Dutch art.

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