Roman Landscape (Römische Landschaft)

Arnold Böcklin

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Object Label

Arnold Böcklin was one of many artists lured to Italy to sketch and paint the light-bathed countryside in and around Rome. Unlike some of his contemporaries who found inspiration in time-worn monuments, Böcklin preferred rustic sites seemingly untouched by humans.

Here, the tiny figure of a bather disrobing in the middle ground underscores the majesty of nature, seen in particular in the ancient trees heavy with moss. Böcklin almost completely removes narrative elements to concentrate his attention on patterns of light and shade, as well as details of foliage and rock formations.

Caption

Arnold Böcklin Swiss, 1827–1901. Roman Landscape (Römische Landschaft), 1852. Oil on canvas, 29 5/16 x 28 1/2in. (74.5 x 72.4cm) frame: 37 5/8 x 36 7/8 x 3 1/2 in. (95.6 x 93.7 x 8.9 cm). Brooklyn Museum, Bequest of A. Augustus Healy, 21.94. No known copyright restrictions (Photo: Brooklyn Museum, 21.94_PS2.jpg)

Gallery

Not on view

Collection

European Art

Title

Roman Landscape (Römische Landschaft)

Date

1852

Geography

Place made: Switzerland

Medium

Oil on canvas

Classification

Painting

Dimensions

29 5/16 x 28 1/2in. (74.5 x 72.4cm) frame: 37 5/8 x 36 7/8 x 3 1/2 in. (95.6 x 93.7 x 8.9 cm)

Signatures

Signed lower left: "A. Böcklin fec"

Credit Line

Bequest of A. Augustus Healy

Accession Number

21.94

Rights

No known copyright restrictions

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Frequent Art Questions

  • Could you tell me about the artist's background?

    Certainly. Arnold Bocklin, was one of the most celebrated and influential artists in central Europe, particularly Germany and Switzerland, in the later 19th century (even though he spent a great deal of time in Italy). He mostly painted scenes from Classical Mythology but depicted them in really imaginative, idiosyncratic and often dark ways. He is associated with Symbolism, a late 19th-century movement in art and literature that rejected the rationalism and materialism of modern life and the realistic description of the natural world in favor of pure subjectivity and the expression of an idea through poetic language, symbolic images, and formal means like color and line. The femme-fatale, death, eroticism, the occult, the diseased and the decadent were popular subjects and themes.
    What is the meaning of the small-scale human depicted in such an overwhelming landscape?
    Many visitors and art historians have theorized that it may symbolize the vulnerability of humans and the awesomeness of nature. Although, this was originally intended to be a landscape with the myth of Pan chasing Syrinx Bocklin chose to omit those figures.

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