Hunters in the Snow
Trees get smaller and smaller like they’re marching
Repetition of trees help lead our eyes to the people on the ice/street
No real middle ground as we move into deep space
No identity to the figures
Men come from an unsuccessful hunt, at the mercy of the seasons, dogs tired and exhausted coming home to the scenery of people enjoying the winter
Trees are barren and birds are encircling their heads
Sense of muted/ neutral colors
Strong sense of diagonals and vertices, trees leading us into the town
Made for Nickles Jonghelink and Antwerp Banker who was an art collector and a merchant
He had asked Brugal for six paintings that represented deep seasons throughout the months
Deep Winter
Early Spring
Late Spring (missing)
Early Summer
Late Summer
Fall
A return to nature in an ideal life to assist with change
Life is difficult but life can be enjoyable; God will prevail
Seasons and how people are working in nature
Showing the life of peasants; the norm
Depicting landscape in which people find difficulty and happiness with it
Landscape given meaning with daily routines of people who inhabit it
Deep winter scene
Netherlandish painting, similar to great wave; “How does man survive?”
In theory we are a bird moving through the landscape
Stresses of winter, men trudging through snow, women with a fire at an inn, joy, daily tasks, ice skating, families, dogs, and sky; Wonder of God
FIrst time in history of Western painting that landscape has been brought to scale
Time of great change in North as a result of protestantism
Dutch genre scenes showed normalcy and tradition even in times of great change
1565 (date of creation) was 1st year of a really awful winter as a result of the Little Ice Age (1550-1700)
Caused by the literal cooling of the Earth after the decimation of the Native Americans
This is because Natives used slash-and-burn agriculture = essentially, this created a kind of global warming which warmed the Earth
When arrival of Europeans leads to deaths of Native Americans, the world literally cools and there is no more slash-and-burn agriculture occuring
16th c. Northern Genre Scene
Man v Nature
Landscape
Genre
Trees get smaller and smaller like they’re marching
Repetition of trees help lead our eyes to the people on the ice/street
No real middle ground as we move into deep space
No identity to the figures
Men come from an unsuccessful hunt, at the mercy of the seasons, dogs tired and exhausted coming home to the scenery of people enjoying the winter
Trees are barren and birds are encircling their heads
Sense of muted/ neutral colors
Strong sense of diagonals and vertices, trees leading us into the town
Made for Nickles Jonghelink and Antwerp Banker who was an art collector and a merchant
He had asked Brugal for six paintings that represented deep seasons throughout the months
Deep Winter
Early Spring
Late Spring (missing)
Early Summer
Late Summer
Fall
A return to nature in an ideal life to assist with change
Life is difficult but life can be enjoyable; God will prevail
Seasons and how people are working in nature
Showing the life of peasants; the norm
Depicting landscape in which people find difficulty and happiness with it
Landscape given meaning with daily routines of people who inhabit it
Deep winter scene
Netherlandish painting, similar to great wave; “How does man survive?”
In theory we are a bird moving through the landscape
Stresses of winter, men trudging through snow, women with a fire at an inn, joy, daily tasks, ice skating, families, dogs, and sky; Wonder of God
FIrst time in history of Western painting that landscape has been brought to scale
Time of great change in North as a result of protestantism
Dutch genre scenes showed normalcy and tradition even in times of great change
1565 (date of creation) was 1st year of a really awful winter as a result of the Little Ice Age (1550-1700)
Caused by the literal cooling of the Earth after the decimation of the Native Americans
This is because Natives used slash-and-burn agriculture = essentially, this created a kind of global warming which warmed the Earth
When arrival of Europeans leads to deaths of Native Americans, the world literally cools and there is no more slash-and-burn agriculture occuring
16th c. Northern Genre Scene
Man v Nature
Landscape
Genre