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RP-P-OB-29.218
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Lossen van een boot op het strand

in or before 1877 - 1903

Medium

lithography

Dimensions

h 345mm × w 270mm

Collection

Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam

Materials

paper

Object Type

print

Subject Matter

beach (+ landscape with figures, staffage); sailing-ship, sailing-boat (+ unloading)

Production Place

The Hague

Acquisition Method

unknown

Acquired

2006

Notes

height 345 mm x width 270 mm

Collection Type

prints

About Hendrik Willem Mesdag

1831–1915Kingdom of the Netherlands

Mesdag forfeited a lucrative career in banking to become of a painter. He and his wife, Sina van Houten, moved to Brussels in 1866 and received training from the painter Willem Roelofs and Mesdag's cousin, Lawrence Alma Tadema. After only a few years, Mesdag decided to dedicate his artistic career to painting the sea and shoreline. In 1869, he and his wife moved to the Hague, where he sketched the sea on a daily basis. Mesdag's most famous painting is the panorama of the coast and village of Scheveningen, which is one of the few remaining panoramas of that age. Mesdag was an important member of the Hague School and was also an avid collector of art. Comment on works: Landscapes; marine; etcher; lithographer