Boats paintings
The Metropolitan Museum has a wide variety of artworks depicting boats. These artworks come from all over the world and span many different time periods. Boats have long been an important part of human cultures, and have been used for transportation, trade, and warfare. The artworks in The Metropolitan Museum provide a glimpse into the different ways that boats have been depicted by cultures throughout history.
Whalers
Turner was seventy years old when Whalers debuted to mixed reviews at the Royal Academy exhibition of 1845.
The painting's subject proved elusive, as the English novelist William Thackeray observed:"That is not a smear of purple you see yonder, but a beautiful whale, whose tail has just slapped a half-dozen whale-boats into perdition; and as for what you fancied to be a few zig-zag lines spattered on the canvas at hap-hazard, look! they turn out to be a ship with all her sails."
Apparently Turner undertook the painting - which was returned to him - for the collector Elhanan Bicknell, who had made his fortune in the whale-oil business.
Fantastic Landscape
This imaginary landscape, or capriccio, is one of three in The Met's collection from the castle of Colloredo di Monte Albano, near Udine.
Their sizes and shapes seem to have been adjusted by Guardi in the course of painting or immediately thereafter, probably in order to be fit into decorative plaster surrounds.
Guardi built these picturesque compositions from rocky outcroppings, slanting tree trunks, and classical ruins, which are populated by fishermen and their families.
View of the Seine
The artist made about seventy oil studies on small wood panels, which he called croquetons.
These boards were easily transported and held in the hand, making them ideal for painting outdoors.
This is among the earliest of the studies that Seurat made along the Seine River on the outskirts of Paris.
The Island of San Michele, Venice
Guardi's views of Venice differ from those of Canaletto in that they are less a detailed description of individual buildings than an attempt to convey the magic of the city, enveloped - as here - in a diaphanous, silvery light.
This picture shows the cemetery island of San Michele with its early Renaissance church, designed by Mauro Codussi in 1469, at center.
Flanking the church are the domed Cappella Emiliani and the Gothic bell tower on one side and the (former) Camaldolensian monastery on the other
The Grand Canal, Venice, Looking Southeast, with the Campo della Carità to the Right
Today, one would be looking at the modern Accademia Bridge from this position on the canal.
The bell tower in Campo della Carità, on the right, fell long ago, but the adjoining church and former convent, with a rebuilt entrance facade, now houses the Galleria dell'Accademia.
Canaletto made many drawings on-site, which he used to construct views like this one in the studio.
The painting belongs to a series of twenty views he probably painted for Joseph Smith ca.
1674 - 1770, British consul in Venice from 1744 to
The Calm Sea
This painting is called "The Beach at Étretat" by Gustave Courbet.
The painting is unusual for Courbet's marine paintings of this period, dominated by dramatically crashing waves.
The painting is tranquil with its immense sky towering over narrow bands of water and sand.
"Alexander is Lowered into the Sea", Folio from a Khamsa (Quintet) of Amir Khusrau Dihlavi
The Khamsa of the Indian poet Amir Khusrau includes a section on the philosopher-king Alexander the Great, who in Khusrau's telling of his life led expeditions to China, Russia, and the Western Isles.
In this copy of the Khamsa made for the Mughal emperor Akbar (r. 1556 - 1605), Alexander is shown being lowered into the sea in a glass diving bell.
While underwater, he will receive a visit from an angel who foretells his death.