Museum Art Reproductions Brazilian Landscape (detail), 1650 by Frans


Frans Post Brazilian Landscape with a Workers House Dutch Golden

Frans Post travelled to Brazil in 1637 as part of the entourage of Governor Johan Maurits of Nassau-Siegen. Once there, he made paintings and drawings of the exotic landscape. On the artist's return to the Dutch Republic in 1644, he made romanticized 'Brazilian' landscapes, like this little panel. On display in room 2.10 Download image


Pin on Art and Artists

Curious Creatures at the National Gallery of Ireland centres on a recently identified group of drawings that expand and enhance our understanding of the work and world of the 17th-century Dutch.


Frans Post Brazilian Landscape with the Monastery of Igaraçú

18 May 2022 The Brazilian landscapes of Frans Post capture the dismal dawn of the colonial age The 17th-century Dutch artist was the first professional painter to record the New World - and the view was far from exotic. By Michael Prodger View of Itamaracá Island in Brazil, 1637, by Frans Post


"Landscape in Brazil" Frans Post Artwork on USEUM

Post lived in Brazil from 1637 to 1644. He received 800 guilders for a landscape painting in the West Indies commissioned by Frederick Henry, Prince of Orange, leading Larsen to believe that Post set out for The Netherlands via Africa shortly before Nassau departed Brazil.


Frans Post A Brazilian Landscape The Met Metropolitan museum of

Frans Jansz. Post city-/landscape twanjanssen yesterday - 359 works 2184 26 super things Natalia Derewicz 2 days ago - 1,232 works 6683 109 Make your own creations with this work


Frans Janszoon Post Brazilian Landscape (Herbert F. Johnson Museum of

1652. In the foreground of this Brazilian river landscape, Frans Post painted exotic plants and animals. A sugar. plantation can be seen in the distance. The artist spent seven years in Brazil in the entourage of Johan Maurits of Nassau-Siegen, Governor of the Dutch West India Company. Johan Maurits early on commissioned Post to record the.


frans post brazilian landscape , 1656, oil on panel. Ideias de

Brazilian Landscape with a Workers House. Frans Janszoon Post (17 November 1612 - 17 February 1680) was a Dutch painter. He was the first European artist to paint landscapes of the Americas, and therefore of South America.[1] In 1636 he traveled to Dutch Brazil at the invitation of Johan Maurits van Nassau-Siegen.[2] Biography


A Brazilian Landscape with a Sugar Mill posters & prints by Frans Post

Frans Post, Brazilian Landscape. The flat terrain of the Netherlands provided the unlikely inspiration for the birth of independent landscape painting in Europe, where it had previously functioned as a setting for religious or historical storytelling. Seventeenth-century Dutch painters embraced the broad vistas and dramatic skies of their home.


Frans Post Brazilian landscape

Frans Post. A painter, illustrator and engraver, Frans Post was born into a family of artists. He came to Brazil in 1637 at age 25 as part of Maurice of Nassau's entourage in Pernambuco (1630-54). He lived in Recife until 1644, a period in which he produced 18 landscapes, only seven of which are still known to exist.


frans post brazilian landscape, 167075, oil on wood, 22 x 27 cm. Oil

Painting Brazil for the Dutch art market, Frans Post, Landscape with Ruins in Olinda. Painting Brazil for the Dutch art market, Frans Post, Landscape with Ruins in Olinda. by Dr. Anna C. Knaap and Dr. Lauren Kilroy-Ewbank. Frans Post, Landscape with Ruins in Olinda, 1663, oil on panel, 22.9 x 29.2 cm (Museum of Fine Arts, Boston)


As paisagens brasileiras nas pinturas de Frans Post » Thais Slaski

Frans Post disembarked in Brazil in 1637, following the retinue of John Maurice, Prince of Nassau-Siegen, who had recently been appointed as the governor of the Dutch possessions in Northeast Brazil by the Dutch West India Company.


Frans Post A Brazilian Landscape

The inter-relationship between the foreground of Frans Post's landscape paintings, containing representations of Brazil's fl ora and fauna, previously considered a decorative afterthought, and the middle/background, showing broader mapped terrains with sugar mills and slave labour, is explored.


Brazilian Landscape, Frans Jansz Post, 1670 1680 Rijksmuseum

Frans Post was born on 17 November, 1612, in Haarlem, an artistically rich environment well known for its prominent landscape painters such as Jan van de Velde (c. 1593-1641), Jan van Goyen (1596-1656), Pieter de Molijn (1595-1661), Cornelis Vroom (1591-1661), Salomon van Ruysdael (c. 1600-1670), and, in the prime time of the genre, Jacob van Ru.


Frans Post

Frans Jansz. Post. Frans Post (1612-1680), a printmaker, painter and draughtsman, was born in Haarlem. He was the son of Jan Jansz. Post, a glass painter from Leiden, and younger brother of Pieter Post, a painter and architect. He may have worked at his brother Pieter's studio before 1636, when the latter recommended him to Johan Maurits van.


Wallpaper landscape, tree, oil, picture, Frans Post, Brazilian Village

A Brazilian Landscape Frans Post Dutch 1650 On view at The Met Fifth Avenue in Gallery 615 From 1630 to 1654, the Dutch Republic maintained a colony in the north of Brazil. Post accompanied the governor to the area and filled sketchbooks with images of local flora and fauna.


Frans Post Landscape in Brazil (Rijksmuseum Amsterdam) 16121680 フランス

237 Landscape in Brazil, Frans Jansz Post, c. 1665 - c. 1669 oil on canvas, h 66cm × w 88cm × d 9.1cm More details Some motifs - for example the six-banded armadillo and the pineapple - recur repeatedly over decades in Post's paintings.