Dutch artist. He is widely considered the greatest of the Dutch landscape painters. He painted scenes near his native town of Haarlem and in Germany, his works often concentrating on the dramatic aspects of nature. A notable example of his atmospheric style is
The Jewish Cemetery (
c. 1660; Gemäldegalerie, Dresden).
Alhough he sometimes painted German and Scandinavian scenes, he is primarily an interpreter of typical Dutch landscape: of dunes, coastal gleams, low horizons over which great clouds sweep, and quiet patches of woodland with gnarled and weatherbeaten trees, his dark greens and greys infusing a personal and romantic melancholy.
Landscape with a Castle and Church about 1668 (National Gallery, London) is typical.
Meindert
Hobbema was his most important pupil, though posthumously he was the master of both English and French landscape painters, greatly influencing Gainsborough, Constable, and the Barbizon School.
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