Painting Nature

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exhibition Details

Within western art, the depiction of nature has had a long and varied history since the Middle Ages, when bestiaries or The Book of Beasts recorded their symbolical attributes, whether real or imagined. While Renaissance artists such as Leonardo da Vinci and Albrecht Dürer focused on accurately recording the natural world, for many artists and collectors living creatures and the landscape they lived in continued to serve as a background to important themes, whether religious or historical.

Gradually, however, the natural world became a subject in its own right. Collectors assembled cabinets of curiosities containing samples of rocks, insects, animals and other phenomena which artists sometimes studied, but it was only in the 18th century that the study of nature became a science. Northern artists promoted landscape painting, recording the fertile fields and villages of Holland and Flanders (now Belgium). In Italy, dramatic hills and sunny vales were often sketched accurately, but then reworked as settings for a scattering of tiny figures acting out a scene. This allowed a classical or religious title to be given to the work.

Animals became the subject of portraiture, perhaps because they were famous for particular deeds, or because they represented something important within society. Their power as symbols has continued to the present day.

Including works by Jacques d'Arthois, Karel Dujardin, Jacob van Ruisdael, Lucy Kemp-Welch, Claude Lorrain, John Everett Millais and others, Painting Nature brings animals, insects and the wider landscape to the fore in a series of works from the collection of Auckland Art Gallery Toi o Tāmaki.

Date
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Curated by
Mary Kisler and Mathew Norman
Location
Level 1
Cost
Free entry

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