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Jan Siberechts

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Wollaton Hall and Park Nottinghamshire Print by Jan Siberechts

Wollaton Hall and Park Nottinghamshire

A View of Bayhall Pembury Kent Print by Jan Siberechts

A View of Bayhall Pembury Kent

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Pasture with two sleeping shepherdessesA View Of Bayhall Pembury Kent

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Landscape with Rainbow, Henley-on-Thames

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Shepherdess

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The Ford

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The Ford

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The Ford

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Crossing a Creek

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The Market Garden

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A View of Bayhall Pembury Kent Print by Jan Siberechts

A View of Bayhall Pembury Kent

Jan Siberechts (1627–1703) was a Flemish landscape painter who after a successful career in Antwerp, emigrated in the latter part of his life to England where his topographical views stand at the beginning of the English landscape tradition.

Life

He was born in Antwerp, the son of a sculptor with the same name. He trained in Antwerp with his father and became a master in the local Guild of Saint Luke by 1648.[1][2] It is possible but not certain that in the late 1640s, early 1650s he visited Italy. He married Maria-Anna Croes in Antwerp in 1652.[3] He developed a personal style of painting landscapes, which impressed George Villiers, 2nd Duke of Buckingham when he visited Antwerp in 1670. The Duke invited the artist to England.

Siberechts arrived in England around 1672 and spent the first three years in England painting decorations in the Duke’s newly built Cliveden House at Taplow, Buckinghamshire, England.[4] From the second part of the 1670s and in the 1680s he travelled widely in England completing numerous commissions for aristocratic clients.[2] He lived in London where one of his daughters was a lace-maker for the Queen. His younger daughter, Frances, married the Flemish émigré sculptor Artus Quellinus III (known in England as 'Arnold Quellinus') and, after being widowed, John Nost, another Flemish émigré sculptor.[5][6]

He died in London.

John Wootton was one of his pupils.[7]

Work
Henley-on-Thames from the Wargrave Road, Oxfordshire, 1698

About 100 of his works have been preserved. His early works were indebted to Dutch Italianate landscape painters such as Nicolaes Berchem and Karel Dujardin.[8] Siberechts must have become acquainted with their work in Antwerp as these artists were mainly active in Rome and Siberechts possibly did not visit Italy himself although such a visit in the late 1640s, early 1650s cannot be excluded.[2][5]

In the 1660s he developed a very personal style of landscape painting, with an emphasis on the Flemish countryside and country life. He introduced into the foreground of his landscapes figures of robust country girls, dressed in bright red, blue and yellow. These countrywomen are shown traveling in carts, on foot and on the backs of mules and in the act of carrying objects, bundles or baskets or crossing flooded roads or fords. The volumetric modeling and the manner in which they are set against brightly lit areas of the countryside make the figures stand out from the picture. The artist used the figures to play with the visual effects produced by the figures in the water.[1]


Landscape with Rainbow, Henley-on-Thames

His later landscapes painted in England in the 1670s and 1680s retained their Flemish character by representing a universal theme. This stands in contrast to Dutch landscape paintings of the period, which typically concentrated on a single aspect of a landscape.[9] Siberechts' landscapes depicted powerful trees and soft light on distant hills while the figures became less important than the landscape itself. The foreground was kept relatively dark in order to draw attention to the broad, brightly lit vista in the background.[2]

Siberechts also painted hunting scenes for his English patrons. These are the earliest country house portraits in England. He used a fairly standardised composition for these hunting scenes: the hunting scene with the huntsmen and horsemen in the foreground and a naturalistic view of the stately home as the backdrop, placed in a misty and atmospheric landscape. The paintings had an important influence on English landscape painting and Siberechts can be regarded as the ‘father of British landscape’. These landscapes also have an important historic and topographical interest.[2] Siberechts stood at the beginning of a long tradition of Flemish painters who made topographical paintings of the estates of the British nobility which includes artists such as Peter Tillemans, Pieter Andreas Rijsbrack and Hendrik Frans de Cort.

References

Jan Siberechts, The Ford at the Thyssen-Bornemisza Museum
Hans Devisscher. "Siberechts, Jan." Grove Art Online. Oxford Art Online. Oxford University Press. Web. 14 September 2014
Jean Siberechts at the Biographie Nationale de Belgique, Volume 22, p. 372-375 (French)
Helen Jacobsen, Luxury and Power: The Material World of the Stuart Diplomat, 1660-1714, Oxford University Press, 2012, p. 82-83
Jan Siberechts 1627–c.1700 at Tate Britain
Patrick O'Brien, Urban Achievement in Early Modern Europe: Golden Ages in Antwerp, Amsterdam and London, Cambridge University Press, 12 Apr, 2001, p. 219
Jan Siberechts at the Netherlands Institute for Art History (Dutch)
Cornelis de Bie, Het Gulden Cabinet, 1660, p. 373
Ingo F. Walther, Masterpieces of Western Art: A History of Art in 900 Individual Studies from the Gothic to the Present Day, Part 1, Taschen, 2002, p. 328

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