Artwork Page for Ruin of the huis Ter Kleef near Haarlem

Details / Information for Ruin of the huis Ter Kleef near Haarlem

Ruin of the huis Ter Kleef near Haarlem

c. 1646–47
(Dutch, 1627–1692)
Measurements
Image: 30.6 x 43.3 cm (12 1/16 x 17 1/16 in.); Sheet: 38.2 x 50.7 cm (15 1/16 x 19 15/16 in.)
Public Domain
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Location
Not on view
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Did You Know?

In the 1640s, the artist Roelant Roghman spent two years traveling by foot and drawing manor houses, fortresses, and civic buildings throughout the Netherlands.

Description

Zuijlen Castle Near Utrecht by Dutch artist Roelant Roghman is one of more than 200 drawings the artist made featuring castles, manor houses, and fortresses during a tour around the Netherlands. The artist traveled on foot to capture the present state of the buildings after a long and protracted war with Spain. He used large sheets of paper and combined ink wash and charcoal, capturing the buildings on the spot and then embellishing each with landscape elements.
A horizontally oriented black chalk drawing on light brown paper depicts a tall, crumbling stone ruin with jagged walls and empty windows. In the lower left, a dark, heavily shaded hill rises in the foreground. Faint, sketchy lines suggest figures to our right. Handwritten script marks the upper left corner. Reddish spotting and wear appear across the paper, while light, hazy strokes define the structure against a flat, atmospheric background.

Ruin of the huis Ter Kleef near Haarlem

c. 1646–47

Roelant Roghman

(Dutch, 1627–1692)
Netherlands

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