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Landscape with Rabbit Hunt by Pieter Bruegel the Elder

Landscape with Rabbit Hunt

Pieter Bruegel the Elder·1560

Historical Context

Painted around 1560, this landscape demonstrates the sixteenth-century tradition of landscape painting during the later Renaissance period. Pieter Brueghel the Elder transforms observed nature into a composed artistic statement, balancing topographic accuracy with aesthetic ideals inherited from Van Eyck and Rubens. Pieter Bruegel the Elder (the progenitor of the Brueghel dynasty) developed the tradition of Flemish peasant genre painting and moralizing proverb imagery that became one of the most distinctive contributions of the northern Netherlands to European art. His imagery combined deep roots in the visual tradition of Bosch with a more earthy, observational approach to social life: the peasants in his paintings are not merely symbols of folly but observed social types with specific bodies, specific activities, and specific positions within the social hierarchy. His influence on the subsequent generations of Flemish genre painters — his sons Jan and Pieter the Younger, Jacob Jordaens, Jan Steen — was foundational, establishing the tradition of moralizing social observation through the vehicle of popular festivity and everyday life.

Technical Analysis

Oil on canvas, the composition demonstrates Pieter Brueghel the Elder's mastery of skilled technique and careful observation. The atmospheric effects and spatial recession create a convincing sense of depth, while the handling of light unifies the composition.

Look Closer

  • ◆The rabbit hunt is easy to miss — hunters with dogs appear as tiny figures nearly swallowed.
  • ◆Brueghel uses a high viewpoint that reveals multiple overlapping planes of land simultaneously.
  • ◆The sky occupies almost half the canvas, filled with naturalistic cloud formations casting moving.
  • ◆A river winds through the middle ground, its surface catching cooler light than the warm earth.

See It In Person

Fondation Custodia

,

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Quick Facts

Medium
Acrylic on paper
Era
Mannerism
Style
Northern Mannerism
Genre
Landscape
Location
Fondation Custodia, undefined
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The Massacre of the Innocents by Pieter Bruegel the Elder

The Massacre of the Innocents

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The Peasant Wedding by Pieter Bruegel the Elder

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