デンドゥール神殿は4月26日(日)から5月8日(金)まで閉館となります。メトロポリタン美術館フィフス・アベニュー館は5月4日(月)に休館となります。

ご来館の計画

小麦畑

ca. 1670
On view at The Met Fifth Avenue in Gallery 615
1670年頃に描かれたこの大作は、ロイスダ ールが繰り返し描いた小麦畑を題材とする絵のうち最も意欲的な作品です。中央に消失点を置いた堂々とした構図は、マントルピースの上の壁などの特定の場所に飾るものとして描かれたものかも知れません。17世紀には、このような大きな作品は壁の高いところに掛けられるのが普通でした。

Artwork Details

Object Information
  • 題: 小麦畑
  • アーティスト: ヤーコプ・ファン・ロイスダール オランダ、1628/29–1682年
  • 月日: 1670年頃
  • 手法: キャンバスに油彩
  • 寸法: 100 x 130.2 cm
  • 提供者: ベンジャミン・アルトマン遺贈、1913年
  • 受け入れ番号: 14.40.623
  • Curatorial Department: European Paintings

Audio

以下でのみ利用可能: English
Cover Image for 5245. Jacob van Ruisdael, Wheat Fields

5245. Jacob van Ruisdael, Wheat Fields

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NARRATOR: When he works behind the camera, cinematographer Gavin Finney tells stories by using film to capture movement. But what if you’re a seventeenth-century landscapist, Jacob van Ruisdael, and instead you have a paintbrush? Finney and curator Adam Eaker discuss.

ADAM EAKER: So he conveys the ordinariness of the Dutch landscape, and at the same time, he transfigures it through light—through the depiction of the sky—into something really dramatic and extraordinary.

GAVIN FINNEY: He’s picked the moment you’d want to press the shutter on a camera, which is this gap in the clouds illuminating the woman and the child. And they’re right on the edge of a shadow of a cloud. We know these clouds are moving. And in my mind, they’re moving towards us, and I think there’s a spotlight racing towards the viewer. And in the next second, the lady and the child will be in darkness.

NARRATOR: The painted scene, like a moving shot in a film, serves a larger story. It invites us to speculate.

GAVIN FINNEY: The man’s carrying a bag. They’re standing still, the woman and the child—so are they waiting for the man? He’s carrying a bag—has he come off a ship? Is he father, or brother, or husband? What’s the story here? It’s not just figures put in for scale; there’s a human narrative going on here as well, enveloped in this great landscape.

NARRATOR: On the far left, the landscape opens to the sea.

ADAM EAKER: I like to think that Ruisdael included this glimpse of the sea as a way of expanding the horizon—both literally and figuratively—to show a kind of interconnectedness between this humble path and some world outside the frame.

GAVIN FINNEY: When you stand in front of it, you can almost imagine it coming to life.

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