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Campos de trigo

ca. 1670
On view at The Met Fifth Avenue in Gallery 615
Ruisdael pintou esta tela grande por volta de 1670. É a versão mais ambiciosa de um tema tratado com frequência pelo pintor: os campos de trigo. A composição monumental, com o nicho no centro, indica que o quadro foi destinado a um lugar concreto da casa, talvez sobre uma lareira, já que seria pendurado de uma grande altura, como era costume no século XVII.

Artwork Details

Object Information
  • Título: Campos de trigo
  • Artista: Jacob van Ruisdael, holandês, 1628/29–1682
  • Data: ca. 1670
  • Meio: Óleo sobre tela
  • Dimensões: 100 x 130,2 cm
  • Linha de créditos: Legado de Benjamin Altman, 1913
  • Número de acesso: 14.40.623
  • Curatorial Department: European Paintings

Audio

Disponível apenas em: 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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