Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Editors’Acknowledgement
- 1 Introduction: Towards a Historical View of Humanity and the Biosphere
- 2 Introductory Overview: the Expanding Anthroposphere
- 3 The Holocene: Global Change and Local Response
- 4 Environment and the Great Transition: Agrarianization
- 5 Exploring the Past: on Methods and Concepts
- 6 Increasing Social Complexity
- 7 Empire: the Romans in the Mediterranean
- 8 Understanding: Fragments of a Unifying Perspective
- 9 Population and Environment in Asia since 1600 AD
- 10 The Past 250 Years: Industrialization and Globalization
- 11 Back to Nature? The Punctuated History of a Natural Monument
- 12 Conclusions: Retrospect and Prospects
- Notes
- Bibliography
- About the Authors
- Index of Subjects
- Index of Names
- Index of Geographic Names
11 - Back to Nature? The Punctuated History of a Natural Monument
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 25 January 2021
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Editors’Acknowledgement
- 1 Introduction: Towards a Historical View of Humanity and the Biosphere
- 2 Introductory Overview: the Expanding Anthroposphere
- 3 The Holocene: Global Change and Local Response
- 4 Environment and the Great Transition: Agrarianization
- 5 Exploring the Past: on Methods and Concepts
- 6 Increasing Social Complexity
- 7 Empire: the Romans in the Mediterranean
- 8 Understanding: Fragments of a Unifying Perspective
- 9 Population and Environment in Asia since 1600 AD
- 10 The Past 250 Years: Industrialization and Globalization
- 11 Back to Nature? The Punctuated History of a Natural Monument
- 12 Conclusions: Retrospect and Prospects
- Notes
- Bibliography
- About the Authors
- Index of Subjects
- Index of Names
- Index of Geographic Names
Summary
A painting by Mauve, or Maris, or Israëls is more telling than nature itself.
Vincent van GoghIf anybody taught me to see nature, it was our old masters. But I learned most from nature itself.
J.H.WeissenbruchIntroduction
Jan Hendrik Weissenbruch (1824-1903) was one of the most distinguished Dutch painters in the 19th century. Skies, shores and landscapes were his passion, in particular the wide, wet ‘polders’ – stretches of land reclaimed from the ravaging waters in Holland. He never had to travel far because all this beauty was abundantly available around The Hague, the town where he had lived all his life. From his home he could walk to the famous collection of Dutch paintings at the Mauritshuis Museum in five minutes, and as a young man he spent many hours there contemplating and even copying the works of his 17th century idols, Johannes Vermeer and Jacob Ruisdael. But although he remained faithful to these great examples until the end of his days, his unrestrained abandonment to nature forced him to develop his own look at the world. ‘At times, nature gives me a real blow,’ he used to say. At such moments drawing and painting was easy. He jotted down his impressions in charcoal so that later, at home, he could work on them in paint. Over the years, his style changed from more meticulous rendering to a highly personal impressionism. What strikes the eye is the subtle balance between joyful and spontaneous virtuosity and compositional grandeur. In particular his monumental skies are unforgettable, with their infinite variety of blues and greys. He brought the polders to life and taught us to feel at home in this flat, green land of mud and water.
Although public recognition only came towards the end of his life, Weissenbruch was one of the most prominent members of the ‘The Hague School,’ a rather loose association of painters, which had its heyday in the years 1870-1900. Jozef Israëls, Jacob Maris and Anton Mauve were other well-known representatives. For many years, the 17th century artistic blossoming in the Low Countries had paralysed rather than stimulated painting in this country, but the The Hague School brought a revival.
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- Mappae MundiHumans and their Habitats in a Long-Term Socio-Ecological Perspective, pp. 379 - 394Publisher: Amsterdam University PressPrint publication year: 2002