| |
Jan van Huysum
Jan van Huysum (1682 - February 8, 1749), Dutch painter, was born
at Amsterdam.
He was the son of Justus van Huysum, who is said to have been expeditious
in decorating doorways, screens and vases. A picture by Justus is
preserved in the gallery of Brunswick, representing "Orpheus
and the Beasts in a wooded landscape," and here we have some
explanation of his son's fondness for landscapes of a conventional
and Arcadian kind; for Jan van Huysum, though skilled as a painter
of still life, believed himself to possess the genius of a landscape
painter.
Half his pictures in public galleries are landscapes, views of
imaginary lakes and harbours with impossible ruins and classic edifices,
and woods of tall and motionless trees-the whole very glossy and
smooth, and entirely lifeless. The earliest dated work of this kind
is that of 1717, in the Louvre, a grove with maidens culling flowers
near a tomb, ruins of a portico, and a distant palace on the shores
of a lake bounded by mountains.
It is doubtful whether any artist ever surpassed van Huysum in
representing fruit and flowers. It has been said that his fruit
has no savour and his flowers have no perfume--in other words, that
they are hard and artificial--but this is scarcely true. In substance
fruit and flower are delicate and finished imitations of nature
in its more subtle varieties of matter. The fruit has an incomparable
blush of down, the flowers have a perfect delicacy of tissue.
Van Huysum, too, shows supreme art in relieving flowers of various
colours against each other, and often against a light and transparent
background. He is always bright, sometimes even gaudy. Great taste
and much grace and elegance are apparent in the arrangement of bouquets
and fruit in vases adorned with has reliefs or in baskets on marble
tables. There is exquisite and faultless finish everywhere. But
what van Huysum has not is the breadth, the bold effectiveness,
and the depth of thought of de Heem, from whom he descends through
Abraham Mignon.
Some of the finest of van Huysum's fruit and flower pieces have
been in English private collections: those of 1723 in the earl of
Ellesmere's gallery, others of 1730-1732 in the collections of Hope
and Ashburton. One of the best examples is now in the National Gallery,
London (1736-1737). No public museum has finer and more numerous
specimens than the Louvre, which boasts of four landscapes and six
panels with still life; then come Berlin and Amsterdam with four
fruit and flower pieces; then St Petersburg, Munich, Hanover, Dresden,
the Hague, Brunswick, Vienna, Carlsruhe and Copenhagen.
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
|
|
|
|
|
| |
| | | | | | | | | | | | |
|
|
|