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Girl in the Dunes
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Girl in the Dunes

mid-19th–early 20th century

Medium

Watercolor and touches of black chalk on paper

Dimensions

Overall: 12 5/8 x 17 3/4 in. (32.1 x 45.1 cm)

Collection

Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, NY

Credit

Mr. and Mrs. Isaac D. Fletcher Collection, Bequest of Isaac D. Fletcher, 1917

Classification

Drawings

Department

Drawings and Prints

Rights

Public Domain

About Jozef Israëls

1824–1911Kingdom of the Netherlands

Israëls was born in Groningen to poor Jewish parents. He trained as an artist in Groningen and Amsterdam, and between 1845 and 1855, he expanded his training by travelling to Paris, Dusseldorf, and the artist's colony at Oosterbeek. However, the most influential locations he visited were the Dutch seaside towns of Zandvoort and Katwijk, were he adopted genre painting as a means of documenting the lives of the towns' fishermen. His painting "Fisherman Carrying a Drowned Man" earned him an international reputation when it was shown at the Paris Salon in 1861. After this, he continued to focus on capturing the inner lives and the grief experienced by poor fishermen and their families. Israëls' concentration on these somber and humble themes is believed to have influenced the young Vincent van Gogh. Comment on works: history, mythology, Portraits; printmker