SALOMON VAN RUYSDAEL (NAARDEN 1600/03-1670 HAARLEM)
SALOMON VAN RUYSDAEL (NAARDEN 1600/03-1670 HAARLEM)
Salomon van Ruysdael (Naarden 1600/03-1670 Haarlem)
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SALOMON VAN RUYSDAEL (NAARDEN 1600/03-1670 HAARLEM)

A panoramic landscape with a hunter at rest

Details
SALOMON VAN RUYSDAEL (NAARDEN 1600/03-1670 HAARLEM)
A panoramic landscape with a hunter at rest
indistinctly signed and dated '162[9]' (lower left)
oil on panel
12 x 18 3/8 in. (30.5 x 46.7 cm.)
Provenance
Walter Stahlberg (1873-1953), Berlin, by 1938, and by descent to his son
Alexander Stahlberg (1912-1995), Hannover.
with Dennis Vanderkar, London, before 1970.
with Salomon Lilian, Amsterdam, where acquired by the present owner in 1996.
Literature
W. Stechow, Salomon van Ruysdael, Berlin, 1975, p. 102, no. 227A, as dated 1628.
P.C. Sutton, The Martin and Kathleen Feldstein Collection, privately published, 2020, pp. 64-65, no. 15, illustrated, as dated 1628.
Exhibited
Cambridge, MA, Harvard Art Museums, 2014, on loan.
Sale room notice
This Lot is Withdrawn.

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Lot Essay

With its low horizon line and cloud-filled sky, this depiction of the countryside surrounding Haarlem stands as a remarkably early example of such a panoramic view unbounded by trees or structures along the edge of the composition. Often described as a ‘wingless’ panorama, such images only begin to be seen in earnest with paintings by Jan van Goyen and Philips Koninck around 1646/7 and would reach their fullest expression in Jacob van Ruisdael’s late panoramic views of Haarlem and Alkmaar from 1669 on. Only a handful of further panoramic views by Salomon van Ruysdael are known, including a painting from a decade later showing the bleaching fields around Haarlem in the Hallwylska Museet, Stockholm (fig. 1).

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