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Southern Seaport in a Storm

Creator Name

Jan Peeters I

Cultural Context

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Date

Creation: 1660-1669 (Baroque)

About the Work

Walters Art Museum Object Description
In 17th-century Europe, what caused storms and weather in general was not understood. Many people saw terrible storms in a personalized way, as evidence of God's power and anger at human failings. The wreckage of a ship and crewmen fighting for their lives can be seen in the violent waves in the foreground. The mountains and style of architecture indicate the Italian coast, so a viewer in Antwerp could feel a satisfying shudder without feeling directly threatened. The shipwreck off a mountainous (and therefore foreign) coast was a favored theme for Jan Peeters, as in a similar painting in The Hermitage Museum In St. Petersberg.For the latest information about this object, Southern Seaport in a Storm, visit the Online Collection ...

Work details

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Title

Southern Seaport in a Storm

Creator

Jan Peeters I, male

Worktype

Painting & Drawing; paintings

Cultural Context

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Material

oil on canvas

Dimensions

H: 28 1/16 x W: 49 3/4 in. (71.2 x 126.4 cm)

Technique

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Language

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Date

Creation: 1660-1669 (Baroque)

Provenance

Walters Art Museum, 1931, by bequest.; Don Marcello Massarenti Collection, Rome [date and mode of acquisition unknown]; Henry Walters, Baltimore, 1902, by purchase; Walters Art Museum, 1931, by bequest.

Style Period

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Rights

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CC0;
GNU Free Documentation License

Inscription

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Location

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Subjects

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Topic

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All Works in Curationist’s archives can be reproduced and used freely. How to attribute this Work:

Jan Peeters I, Southern Seaport in a Storm, 1660-1669 (Baroque), Walters Art Museum. CC0, GNU Free Documentation License.

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