A Mountainous Landscape with Travellers on a Road

Jan van Aken Dutch

Not on view

In a rocky valley, two travelers are tending their horses near a little stream. A natural bridge towers to the right, forming a monumental and imposing element in this mountainous landscape. With delicately applied washes, the artist has effectively captured the play of sunlight on rock formations and its vegetation.


Jan van Aken is one of the lesser known Dutch landscapists from the seventeenth century. Information on the artist’s life is limited. On basis of the date 1652, appearing on three of his drawings, we can pinpoint his activity around the middle of the seventeenth century. His compositions, executed in pen and ink and grey washes, depict valleys, woods and townscapes, often bathed in warm sunlight. One is inclined to relate van Aken’s work to that of Italianate artists such as Jan Both (1610–1652) and Nicolaes Berchem (1620–1683). Yet the vistas featuring in van Aken’s drawings seem to be inspired by sites closer to home, rather than the Mediterranean. The pines that are towering the rocks on this particular sheet, for example, are more likely to be encountered in Northern Europe.

A Mountainous Landscape with Travellers on a Road, Jan van Aken (Dutch, 1614–?1661), Black chalk, pen and brown ink, with brush and gray wash; framing lines in black chalk and gray ink

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