Two oil on board maritime paintings depicting figures watching sailboats on water. One painting signed lower right under frame, illegible. Other shows a harbor in the background, but both clearly by the same artist.
Condition: Some cracking of paint on both.
Overall: 12 3/4 x 15 in.
Sight: 4 1/2 x 11 1/2 in.
#3499 .
Maritime art is a form of figurative art (that is, painting, drawing, printmaking and sculpture) that portrays or draws its main inspiration from the sea. Maritime painting is a particularly popular genre that originated thousands of years ago but reaching its zenith starting in the 17th Century during the Danish Golden Age. In practice the art usually depicts shipping on rivers and estuaries, beach scenes and all art showing boats, without any rigid distinction, and can be drawn or painted from dry land or out in the open ocean. Strictly speaking “maritime art” should always include some element of human seafaring, whereas “marine art” is its own genre, showing seascapes with no human element. With the rise of Romantic art, the sea and the coast was reclaimed from the Dutch specialists by many landscape painters, and works including no vessels became common for the first time. The British especially dominated the genre, once Willem Van de Velde the Elder and his son (the Younger) moved from Holland to England to work for King Charles II. Major British artists who specialized in marine and maritime images, especially during the 19th Century, include William Anderson, Robert Cleveley, George Chambers, and Philip de Loutherbourg. The conventions of the Dutch masters remained quite common in maritime art, although there have been outliers in the style as expressionism and surrealism appeared in the late 19th through mid 20th Centuries.
Condition
Some cracking of paint on both.
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