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The Hunters in the Snow

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Hunters in the Snow
ArtistPieter Bruegel the Elder
Year1565
TypeOil on panel
Dimensions117 cm × 162 cm (46 in × 63+34 in)
LocationKunsthistorisches Museum, Vienna

The Hunters in the Snow (Dutch: Jagers in de Sneeuw), also known as The Return of the Hunters, is a 1565 oil-on-wood painting by Pieter Bruegel the Elder. The Northern Renaissance work is one of a series of works, five of which still survive, that depict different times of the year. The painting is in the collection of the Kunsthistorisches Museum in Vienna, Austria. This scene is set in the depths of winter during December/January.

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  • Bruegel, Hunters in the Snow (Winter)
  • DailyArt presents: Pieter Bruegel the Elder, Hunters in the Snow (Winter), 1562
  • The Hunters in the Snow
  • PIETER BRUEGEL (THE ELDER) - THE HUNTERS IN THE SNOW
  • 눈 속의 사냥꾼 :: 피테르 브뤼헐 :: The Hunters in the Snow

Transcription

(jazzy music) Female: Just looking at this painting makes me feel cold. Male: We're looking at Pieter Bruegel's The Return of the Hunters or Hunters in the Snow. It's this wonderful panel painting from the Renaissance, from Flanders, made for a merchant in Antwerp that had asked Bruegel to make six panel paintings, which were study of the labors of the months. This is an idea that goes back to manuscript illumination, back to the Medieval Period. This is perhaps the very first time in the history of painting where that idea has been brought to this larger scale. Female: Each one of these paintings represents a different time of year. We're obviously looking at winter here. We see some hunters returning from their hunt with their dogs, but they haven't got very much to show for their day out hunting. Male: If you look closely, you can see a rabbit just hanging off the back of one of the hunters, but it is a pretty meager catch. It does give us a sense of the stresses of winter. Female: You can see the footprints that they're leaving in the snow. There's this real sense of trudging through this deep snowy landscape. Male: In the foreground, there is that sense of melancholy as well. Their backs are turned to us. The pack of dogs that follow, their heads are down. There's a sense of them being tired and unsuccessful. But as our eye moves down the hill, and it moves down pretty fast, there's almost no middle ground, all of a sudden we're down in this icy pond. Then we see a different side of winter. We see playfulness. In fact, this painting is full of the activities of winter. Female: We're not just looking at a lovely landscape, but a landscape that is given meaning by the activities of the people that inhabit it, by their daily routines. Male: In fact, that idea is an ancient one, and comes from Virgil, Bruegel's patron may well have been thinking about Virgil when he commissioned this series, this notion of painting a landscape that is given meaning by the labors of the people within it. Although the image seems as if it is a moment in time, in fact the painting is carefully composed. Our eye follows the hunters down the hill, which is given a wonderful visual rhythm by those trees, and then my eye wants to ride down to that frozen pond where we see a woman pulling somebody else on a little sleigh. Then I want to go by those black crows and under those arches. There's that lovely woman just above who's carrying, perhaps, some firewood. Then beyond that we see lots of play taking place. Female: We do. We see people pulling each other on the ice, children playing and chasing each other, a man about to hit a ball with a stick on the ice, playing kind of ice hockey for the 16th century. Male: Then, perhaps, actually someone who's fallen, whose hat has fallen off. Female: This is really typical of Netherlandish painting, this idea of giving us a lot of visual information, a lot of things to look at, a small little narrative so that we can patiently discover more and more. Male: Think about the time that this is made. This is the Renaissance. In Italy, there's an attempt at this moment to perfect, to isolate, the most ideal moment. It's so different from Northern painting which is concerned with these almost literary narratives. Female: And the every day, the mundane. Male: It is still interested in finding meaning that comes from the multiplicity of human activities no matter how prosaic. Our eye also can soar through the painting. Female: Much like the birds that we see. Male: That's exactly what I was thinking. We have the birds who soar through the space, even into the very distant hills that are a reminder that Bruegel had actually made his way from northern Europe across the Alps to Italy. But unlike some of the other northerners who made that trip, he doesn't come back with the latest traditions of the Italian Renaissance painters. Instead, he seems to be caught in the landscape. Look at that beautiful Alpine vista that we have in the upper right. There's nothing like that in the Netherlands. There's nothing like that in Flanders. Female: Right. When Bruegel made his trip down to Italy, what he seems to have most been impressed with were the Alps. This is a good reminder that what we're looking at is not an actual view, for example, that Bruegel saw out his window, but a composed, partially imagined, composite landscape, activated by these human figures. Male: The landscape feels frozen and harsh, but it's warmed by its human inhabitants. (jazzy music)

Background and origins

The Hunters in the Snow, and the series to which it belongs, are in the medieval and early Renaissance tradition of the Labours of the Months: depictions of various rural activities and work understood by a spectator in Breugel's time as representing the different months or times of the year.

Description and composition

The painting shows a wintry scene in which three hunters are returning from an expedition accompanied by their dogs. By appearances the outing was not successful; the hunters appear to trudge wearily, and the dogs appear downtrodden and miserable. One man carries the "meager corpse of a fox" illustrating the paucity of the hunt. In front of the hunters in the snow are the footprints of a rabbit or hare—which has escaped or been missed by the hunters. The overall visual impression is one of a calm, cold, overcast day; the colors are muted whites and grays, the trees are bare of leaves, and wood smoke hangs in the air. Several adults and a child prepare food (preparing to singe a pig) at an inn with an outside fire. Of interest are the jagged mountain peaks which do not exist in Belgium or Holland.

The painting prominently depicts crows sitting in the denuded trees and a magpie flies in the upper centre of the scene. Bruegel sometimes uses these two species of birds to indicate an ill-omen as in Dutch culture magpies are associated with the Devil.[1]

The landscape itself is a flat-bottomed valley (a river meanders through it) with jagged peaks visible on the far side. A watermill is seen with its wheel frozen stiff. In the distance, figures ice skate, play bandy (before it became an organized sport), and play eisstock[2] ("ice-stick" - similar to curling) on a frozen lake; they are rendered as silhouettes.

Interpretation and reception

Writing in the "opinion" section of Nature, art historian Martin Kemp points out that Old Masters are popular subjects for Christmas cards and states that "probably no 'secular' subject is more popular than ... Hunters in the Snow".[3] The painting is the subject of modernist poet William Carlos Williams's ekphrastic poem "The Hunter in The Snow".[4] Hunters in the Snow appears in Russian director Andrei Tarkovsky's film Solaris (1972).

The surviving Months of the Year cycle are:

Popular culture

The film 24 Frames is structured in 24 chapters of "Frames" usually set in a fixed camera position filming a scene of nature or the seashore. The 'action' of each Frame is highly constrained and often focuses on either one or two animals either casually interacting or possibly vaguely interacting with one another. The opening Frame depicts the oil masterpiece by Bruegel of Hunters in the Snow and selectively animates the actions of one of the animals or birds depicted by Bruegel by superimposing movement upon Brugel's original canvas to suggest motion and life in process. [citation needed]

See also

References

  1. ^ Kaschek, Bertram; Buskirk, Jessica; Müller, Jürgen, eds. (2018). Pieter Bruegel the Elder and Religion. Leiden and Boston: Brill. p. 265. ISBN 9789004367579. Retrieved 2 February 2021.
  2. ^ Wolf, Manfred (2018-10-20). "Pieter Bruegel - Meister der Beobachtung". Ober Österreich Nachrichten (in German). Retrieved 2022-10-24.
  3. ^ Kemp, Martin (December 2008). "Looking at the face of the Earth". Nature. 456 (18): 876. Bibcode:2008Natur.456..876K. doi:10.1038/456876a.
  4. ^ Williams, William Carlos. "The Hunter in the Snow". Emory University. Retrieved 13 December 2018.

Further reading

This page was last edited on 1 May 2024, at 22:20
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