Artwork Page for Peasants Crossing a Stream

Details / Information for Peasants Crossing a Stream

Peasants Crossing a Stream

c. 1670
(Flemish, 1627-c. 1703)
Culture
Flanders
Measurements
Framed: 119 x 143 x 9 cm (46 7/8 x 56 5/16 x 3 9/16 in.); Unframed: 99.7 x 122.5 cm (39 1/4 x 48 1/4 in.)
Public Domain
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Location
Not on view

Description

The painting is characteristic of Jan Siberechts's Antwerp style, characterized by scenes with fords through which peasants wade with their cattle. The peasants wear simple but brightly colored attire and stand out against the cool green landscape. Flanked by overgrown foliage, the silver hues of the still stream shimmer with reflections. Over the course of his career, which included moving to London in 1672, Siberechts continued to use many of the same figures in his paintings, including Flemish peasant women carrying jugs, like the one seen in this painting. Likewise, his approaches to depicting animals, such as the cows seen here, changed very little over time and are ubiquitous throughout his oeuvre.
A horizontally oriented oil painting depicts a pastoral landscape with figures and livestock crossing a stream. In the foreground, a woman in a white blouse and a man in a red coat lead cows and sheep through dark water. Tall, leafy green trees frame the left, while a gnarled, weathered trunk rises on the right. Beyond the water, a hazy forest sits beneath a muted gray sky, rendered with soft brushstrokes.

Peasants Crossing a Stream

c. 1670

Jan Siberechts

(Flemish, 1627-c. 1703)
Flanders

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