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Jan van Goyen
Jan van Goyen (January 13, 1596 - April 27, 1656) was a Dutch
landscape painter.
Biography
Like many Dutch painters of his time, Jan van Goyen studied art
in the town of Haarlem. At age 35, he established a permanent studio
at Den Haag (The Hague).
Typically, a Dutch painter of the 17th century (also known as the
Dutch Golden Age) will fall into one of four categories, a painter
of portraits, landscapes, still-lifes, or genre. Dutch painting
was highly specialized and rarely could an artist hope to achieve
greatness in more than one area in a lifetime of painting. Jan van
Goyen would be classified primarily as a landscape artist with an
eye for the genre subjects of everyday life. He painted many of
the canals in and around Den Haag as well as the villages surrounding
countryside of Delft, Rotterdam, Leiden, and Gouda.
Van Goyen's Technique
Jan van Goyen would begin a painting using a support primarily
of thin oak wood.
To this panel, he would scrub on several layers of a thin animal
hide glue.
Then with a blade, scrape over the entire surface a thin layer
of tinted white lead to act as a ground and to fill the low areas
of the panel. The ground was tinted light brown, sometimes reddish,
or yellow ocher in color.
Next, Van Goyen would loosely and very rapidly sketch out the scene
to be painted with pen and ink without going into the small details
of his subject. This walnut ink drawing can be clearly seen in some
of the thinly painted areas of his work. For a guide, he would have
turned to a detailed drawing. The scene would have been drawn from
life outdoors and then kept in the studio as reference material.
Drawings by artists of the time were rarely works of art in their
own right as they are viewed today.
On his palette he would grind out a color collection of neutral
grays, umbers, ocher and earthen greens that looked like they were
pulled from the very soil he painted. A varnish oil medium was used
as vehicle to grind his powered pigments into paint and then used
to help apply thin layers of paint which he could easily blend.
The dark areas of the painting were kept very thin and transparent
with generous amounts of the oil medium. The light striking the
painting in these sections would be lost and absorbed into the painting
ground. The lighter areas of the picture were treated heavier and
opaque with a generous amount of white lead mixed into the paint.
Light falling on the painting in a light section is reflected back
at the viewer.
The effect is a startling realism and three-dimensional quality.
The surface of a finished painting resembles a fluid supple mousse,
masterfully whipped and modeled with the brush. When looking at
a Van Goyen painting one can almost feel the wind in the trees laced
with the scent of a bluest smoke lingering above a rustic cottage,
or taste the salted air near the seashore he painted.
The paintings are the excellent portrayal of the events and scenes
that we see around us. The painters are the best cameras of the
world. They reproduce many different types of pictures. They even
draw imaginary pictures that do not exist in this world. We tend
to use both thinned oil paints and dense oil paints. Masterpieces
can be dyed more than once, but each time it may be different from
the existing paintings.h
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