Artwork Page for Italian Landscape

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Italian Landscape

c. 1630
(French, 1604–1682)
Measurements
Framed: 126.5 x 162.5 x 5 cm (49 13/16 x 64 x 1 15/16 in.); Unframed: 97.5 x 134.2 cm (38 3/8 x 52 13/16 in.)
Public Domain
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Location
Not on view

Description

Although French by birth, Claude Lorrain spent his entire working career in Rome. He revolutionized the art of landscape painting by filling his harmoniously ordered scenes (inspired by the campagna, the countryside around Rome) with a golden, hazy light. Painted early in Lorrain's career, Italian Landscape shows a wide, sweeping vista with a wooded hill topped by a structure resembling an ancient Roman temple. The left side of the picture is dark, but the foreground sweeps away in a curve to the right that leads off into an increasingly luminous distance.
A horizontally oriented oil painting depicts a massive, dark-wooded cliff crowned with stone ruins on the left. In the foreground, a figure in red balances across a fallen tree over a stream while two others in blue and orange stand on the bank. To the right, a sunlit valley with a church tower recedes toward blue mountains. Thick white and gray clouds fill the sky, casting deep shadows over the landscape.

Italian Landscape

c. 1630

Claude Lorrain

(French, 1604–1682)
France, 17th century

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