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Prater Landscape

Ferdinand Georg Waldmüller1830

Alte Nationalgalerie, Staatliche Museen zu Berlin

Alte Nationalgalerie, Staatliche Museen zu Berlin
Berlin, Germany

Compared to his portraits and genre scenes, Waldmüller’s landscapes are fewer in number but not less in importance. They demonstrate that plein air painting can even be consistent by doing without an emphatically subjective, spontaneous brushstroke, thus allowing the depiction of minute detail. The harsh light and the abrupt spatial contrasts of Waldmüller’s later paintings are not yet to be found in this early Prater landscape. Spreading out peacefully under the bushy foliage of the elms, the green of the meadow continues into the bright distance. The horizon is remarkably low, delineated by the new blocks of flats in Vienna’s Leopoldstadt. For stylistic reasons the very small, partly obscured signature has usually been read as “1830.” That would make this picture the first in a series of about ten small and four larger landscapes showing Vienna’s Prater. The last one of these, the so-called Large Prater Landscape (1849, Vienna, Österreichische Galerie im Belvedere) clearly seems to have more weight and pathos than the Berlin picture, which is bathed in cool morning light and populated by only one small accessory figure.

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  • Title: Prater Landscape
  • Creator: Ferdinand Georg Waldmüller
  • Date Created: 1830
  • Physical Dimensions: w91.5 x h71.0 cm
  • Type: Painting
  • Technique and material: Oil on wood
  • Inv.-No.: A I 856
  • ISIL-No.: DE-MUS-815114
  • External link: Alte Nationalgalerie, Staatliche Museen zu Berlin
  • Copyrights: Text: © Prestel Verlag / Alte Nationalgalerie, Staatliche Museen zu Berlin, Photo: © b p k - Photo Agency / Nationalgalerie, Staatliche Museen zu Berlin / Jörg P. Anders
  • Collection: Nationalgalerie, Staatliche Museen zu Berlin
  • Artist biography: Ferdinand Georg Waldmüller was an Austrian painter but also a writer. His formal training was completed at the Academy of Fine Arts in Vienna where he was student of Hubert Maurer and Johann Baptist Lampi. He initially worked as a portraitist. In 1823 he painted an image of Ludwig van Beethoven. He practiced his skills by copying the artworks of old masters and only seriously turned his hand to painting landscapes after taking classes from Johann Nepomuk Schödlberger. These compositions gained him fame for their sense of colour and his rendering of nature. During his lifetime Waldmüller lived in several places, including Prague, Paris and Italy and participated in several international exhibitions. He was later appointed a professor at the Academy of Fine Arts in Vienna. Waldmüller is best known for such works as 'Roses' (1843) and 'The Expected' (1860).
  • Artist Place of Death: Hinterbrühl, Austria
  • Artist Place of Birth: Vienna, Austria
  • Artist Dates: 1793-01-15/1865-08-23
Alte Nationalgalerie, Staatliche Museen zu Berlin

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