
Rembrandt · PD
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Rembrandt painted very few pure landscapes, and this is one of them, made in 1638, when he was the most sought-after portraitist in Amsterdam and had money to spare. It is not a view of anywhere in particular. Where other Dutch painters mapped real towns and flat horizons, Rembrandt largely invented this one: a dark, swollen sky pressing down on a valley, a stone bridge, a distant tower, and a burst of cold sunlight breaking through to light a single stand of trees while everything around it stays in shadow. The drama is all in that contrast of storm and sudden light, closer to a stage set than to a place you could walk to. He seems to have made it for his own pleasure rather than a client, working out effects of weather he would keep chasing in his etchings.




