Not currently on display at the V&A

Landscape with Canal and Château

Oil Painting
first quarter of 19th century (painted)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

A landscape with a canal crossed by a low bridge and a white turreted château in the background. A boat and horse-drawn carts transport supplies and a long low building visible on the ridge at upper right. An attribution to a Scandinavian or German painter in the circle of Johan Christian Dahl (1788-1857) was suggested, based on photographs only, by Ursula J.A. de Goede-Broug (verbal communication) in February 2010. A Norwegian painter, Dahl travelled in Italy before settling in Dresden in 1823 where he taught, as a professor at the Dresden Academy, from 1824. A friend of Caspar David Friedrich, whose Romanticism he shared, his work was greatly admired by Goethe. His landscape paintings combine natural observation and imaginative composition and often include dramatic effects of light and perspective. Dahl was greatly inspired by Dutch landscape painters of the 17th century. 562-1870 exhibits the flat, dry style of Dahl's paintings which were inspired in subject matter by earlier Dutch works by Ruisdael and Berchem. The turreted castle in the background is likely an artistic invention.


Object details

Category
Object type
TitleLandscape with Canal and Château (generic title)
Materials and techniques
Oil on canvas
Brief description
Oil Painting, 'Landscape with Canal and Château', Scandinavian or German School, First Quarter of the 19th century
Physical description
A landscape with a canal crossed by a low bridge and a white turreted château in the background. A boat and horse-drawn carts transport supplies and a long low building visible on the ridge at upper right
Dimensions
  • Estimate height: 78.5cm
  • Estimate width: 124.3cm
Dimensions taken from Catalogue of Foreign Paintings, I. Before 1800, C.M. Kauffmann, Victoria and Albert Museum, London, 1973
Styles
Marks and inscriptions
(no longer legible) (A signature on the log near the tree at left is no longer legible.)
Credit line
Bequeathed by John M. Parsons
Object history
Bequeathed by John M. Parsons, 1870

Historical significance: An attribution to a Scandinavian or German painter in the circle of Johan Christian Dahl (1788-1857) was suggested, based on photographs only, by Ursula J.A. de Goede-Broug (verbal communication) in February 2010. A Norwegian painter, Dahl travelled in Italy before settling in Dresden in 1823 where he taught, as a professor at the Dresden Academy, from 1824. A friend of Caspar David Friedrich, whose Romanticism he shared, his work was greatly admired by Goethe. His landscape paintings combine natural observation and imaginative composition and often include dramatic effects of light and perspective, as in Birch Tree in Storm (1849; Bergen, Billedgal.). Dahl was greatly inspired by Dutch landscape painters of the 17th century. 562-1870 exhibits the flat, dry style of Dahl's paintings which were inspired in subject matter by earlier Dutch works by Ruisdael and Berchem. The turretted castle in the background shares general characteristics with sixteenth-century châteaux in Denmark, Germany and France but is likely an artistic invention.




In 1823 the Norwegian landscape painter Johann Christian Dahl moved into a flat in Caspar David Friedrich’s house in Dresden, and for some time the two painters worked and exhibited together. The close friendship with Dahl probably contributed to a new openness and willingness to experiment, which also extended his range of colours. However, the more naturalistic approach to landscape prompted by Dahl was invariably supplemented by symbolic meaning in Friedrich’s paintings, incorporating such ideas as the transience of life, death and rebirth.
Historical context
Landscape art was much esteemed in the eighteenth century. Particularly in England, France, Italy and Germany and the interest remained strong through the nineteenth century, as discussed for example, in John Ruskin's Modern Painters (1843). In Germany, Caspar David Friedrich, who also studied in Copenhagen, laid ground for the Romantic movement and became its leading proponent. Romantic artists were fascinated by nature they interpreted as a mirror of the mind. They investigated human nature and personality, the folk culture, the national and ethnic origins, the medieval era, the exotic, the remote, the mysterious and the occult.
Production
An attribution to a Scandinavian or German painter in the circle of Johan Christian Dahl was suggested by Ursula J.A. de Goede-Broug, while a German attribution was suggested by Dr. Jacek Tylicki (both verbal communication, based on photographs only) in February 2010. A now illegible signature, described as 'Schmidt' in the 1893 is untenable. Kauffmann (1973) suggested that the style and the nature of the landscape indicated a Dutch origin.
Subjects depicted
Summary
A landscape with a canal crossed by a low bridge and a white turreted château in the background. A boat and horse-drawn carts transport supplies and a long low building visible on the ridge at upper right. An attribution to a Scandinavian or German painter in the circle of Johan Christian Dahl (1788-1857) was suggested, based on photographs only, by Ursula J.A. de Goede-Broug (verbal communication) in February 2010. A Norwegian painter, Dahl travelled in Italy before settling in Dresden in 1823 where he taught, as a professor at the Dresden Academy, from 1824. A friend of Caspar David Friedrich, whose Romanticism he shared, his work was greatly admired by Goethe. His landscape paintings combine natural observation and imaginative composition and often include dramatic effects of light and perspective. Dahl was greatly inspired by Dutch landscape painters of the 17th century. 562-1870 exhibits the flat, dry style of Dahl's paintings which were inspired in subject matter by earlier Dutch works by Ruisdael and Berchem. The turreted castle in the background is likely an artistic invention.
Bibliographic references
  • Kauffmann, C.M., Catalogue of Foreign Paintings, I. Before 1800, London: Victoria and Albert Museum, 1973, p. 98, cat. no. 110
  • Twee Gouden Eeuwen: Schilderkunst uit Nederland en Denemarken Rijksmuseum, Amstrdam; Waanders Uitgevers, Zwolle; Statens Museum for Kunst, Kopenhagen, 2001.
Collection
Accession number
562-1870

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Record createdSeptember 14, 2006
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