Not currently on display at the V&A

Rocky Landscape with a Statue, a Broken Column and Figures

Oil Painting
ca. 1675 (painted)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

Frederick de Moucheron (1633-1686) trained with Jan Asselijn in Amsterdam and worked in France (Paris and Lyon) for several years before settling definitively in Amsterdam in the late 1650s. He belong to the second generation of Dutch Italianates such as Nicolaes Berchem, Jan Both, Karel Dujardin or Jan Baptist Weenix and specialised in landscape painting reminiscent of his master's and Jan Both's work. His son, Isaac, trained with him and also become an important landscapist.

This painting, one of a pair (see 481-1882), is a typical example of F. de Moucheron's production of Italianate landscapes in which small figures are set in vertical, almost overwhelming, vegetation. This construction looks far less naturalistic than those of the previous generation and corresponds therefore to the ideal classicism that reached its height in the second half of the century. This composition shows an accurate construction that sacrifices to the close observation of nature: the statue and the broken statue's odd position at the top of a rocky versant is a good illustration of these artificial landscapes set as a theatrical stage. Its structure complements the pendant as the mountain with a statue looks symmetric to the rocky versant on the other painting. In this respect, this painting should probably be hung on the right while the other is on the left.


Object details

Category
Object type
TitleRocky Landscape with a Statue, a Broken Column and Figures (generic title)
Materials and techniques
Oil on canvas
Brief description
Oil painting, 'Rocky Landscape with a Statue, a Broken Column and Figures', Frederick de Moucheron, ca. 1675
Physical description
A rocky and wooded landscape with a statue and a broken column in the upper right and figures with hunters and hounds in the middle foreground; a mountainous horizon in the distant foreground.
Dimensions
  • Estimate height: 78.6cm
  • Estimate width: 67.2cm
Dimensions taken fromC.M. Kauffmann, Catalogue of Foreign Paintings, I. Before 1800, Victoria and Albert Museum, London, 1973.
Style
Marks and inscriptions
'Moucheron f' (Signed by the artist, lower left)
Credit line
Bequeathed by John Jones
Object history
Bequeathed by John Jones, 1882
Ref : Parkinson, Ronald, Catalogue of British Oil Paintings 1820-1860. Victoria & Albert Museum, HMSO, London, 1990. p.xix-xx

John Jones (1800-1882) was first in business as a tailor and army clothier in London 1825, and opened a branch in Dublin 1840. Jones often visited Ireland and travelled in Europe, particularly in France. He retired in 1850, but retained an interest in his firm. He lived quietly at 95 Piccadilly from 1865 to his death in January 1882. After the Marquess of Hertford and his son Sir Richard Wallace, Jones was the principal collector of French 18th century fine and decorative arts in Britain. Jones bequeathed an important collection of French 18th century furniture and porcelain to the V&A, and among the British watercolours and oil paintings he bequeathed to the V&A are subjects which reflect his interest in France.

See also South Kensington Museum Art Handbooks. The Jones Collection. With Portrait and Woodcuts. Published for the Committee of Council on Education by Chapman and Hall, Limited, 11, Henrietta Street. 1884.
Chapter I. Mr. John Jones. pp.1-7.
Chapter II. No.95, Piccadilly. pp.8-44. This gives a room-by-room guide to the contents of John Jones' house at No.95, Piccadilly.
Chapter VI. ..... Pictures,... and other things, p.138, "The pictures which are included in the Jones bequest are, with scarcely a single exception, valuable and good; and many of them excellent works of the artists. Mr. Jones was well pleased if he could collect enough pictures to ornament the walls of his rooms, and which would do no discredit to the extraordinary furniture and other things with which his house was filled."

Historical significance: Frederick de Moucheron trained in Amsterdam with Jan Asselijn but unlike many of his generation, he never seemed to go to Italy and settled in France for some years, more specifically in Paris and Lyon where there were an important Italian community from which he may have been in contact with Italian landscape tradition. F. de Moucheron used to depict landscapes in which other painters would add the figures: Dirk Helmbrecker, Johannes Lingelbach, Adriaen van de Velde and Nicolaes Berchem all provided staffage for his paintings. In this picture, C.M. Kauffmann noted that the figures were long thought to be by Adriaen van de Velde however their costumes seem to belong to a time posterior to his death. Hunting was a popular subject in Dutch Italianate landscapes that enables the artist to challenge the traditional division between figural and landscape paintings. The composition structured upon a massive block of rock at the right-hand side of the picture and a brighter background made of wooded mountains that become increasingly light as they recede into the distance is reminiscent of such late compositions by Adam Pynacker as the two landscapes in the Wallace Collection, London. De Moucheron's work was appreciated primarily for its picturesque and decorative qualities. Another pair by F. de Moucheron in the Kunsthistorisches Museum, Vienna (Inv. No. GG_425 and GG_428). These paintings are also a good example of the influence of the Roman trained French painters such as Nicolas Poussin and his follower Gaspard Dughet during the mid 17th century.
Historical context
Italianates landscapes were particularly praised during the 17th century up to the early 19th century. The term conventionally refers to the school of Dutch painters and draughtsmen who were active in Rome for more than a hundred years, starting from the early 17th century. These artists produced mainly pastoral subjects bathed in warm southern light, set in an Italian, or specifically Roman, landscape. The term is also often applied, but wrongly, to artists who never left the northern Netherlands but who worked primarily in an Italianate style. Eighteenth-century collectors, especially French ones, preferred a view by Nicolaes Berchem (ca.1620-1683) or Jan Both (ca.1610-1652) to a scene of the Dutch country side by Jacob van Ruisdael (ca.1628-1682) for instance. The taste for the Italianates continued undiminished into the 19th century. An early voice denouncing these artists was that of John Constable (1776-1837) and at the end of the century Italianates had lost favour oartly because of the rise of Impressionism and the appreciation of the Dutch national school of landscape expounded by such eminent critics as Wilhem von Bode, E.W. Moes and Cornelis Hofstede de Groot.
Subjects depicted
Summary
Frederick de Moucheron (1633-1686) trained with Jan Asselijn in Amsterdam and worked in France (Paris and Lyon) for several years before settling definitively in Amsterdam in the late 1650s. He belong to the second generation of Dutch Italianates such as Nicolaes Berchem, Jan Both, Karel Dujardin or Jan Baptist Weenix and specialised in landscape painting reminiscent of his master's and Jan Both's work. His son, Isaac, trained with him and also become an important landscapist.

This painting, one of a pair (see 481-1882), is a typical example of F. de Moucheron's production of Italianate landscapes in which small figures are set in vertical, almost overwhelming, vegetation. This construction looks far less naturalistic than those of the previous generation and corresponds therefore to the ideal classicism that reached its height in the second half of the century. This composition shows an accurate construction that sacrifices to the close observation of nature: the statue and the broken statue's odd position at the top of a rocky versant is a good illustration of these artificial landscapes set as a theatrical stage. Its structure complements the pendant as the mountain with a statue looks symmetric to the rocky versant on the other painting. In this respect, this painting should probably be hung on the right while the other is on the left.
Associated object
481-1882 (Set)
Bibliographic references
  • Kauffmann, C.M., Catalogue of Foreign Paintings, I. Before 1800. London: Victoria and Albert Museum, 1973, pp. 193-4, cat. no. 232.
  • Christopher Wright, Dutch paintings in the Seventeenth Century: Images of a Golden Age in Bristish Collections, London, 1989, p. 222.
  • B.S. Long, Catalogue of the Jones Collection, 1923, p. 31, pl. 36.
Collection
Accession number
480-1882

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Record createdFebruary 28, 2007
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