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ALLART See also: government clerk at See also: Alkmaar, was See also: born, it is said, in 1621, and educated, if we believe an old tradition, under Roeland Savery at See also: Utrecht
.
He wandered in 1645 to See also: Haarlem, where he studied under See also: Peter de Molyn, and finally settled about 1657 at See also: Amsterdam, where he remained till his See also: death
.
It would be difficult to find a greater contrast than that which is presented by the See also: works of Savery and See also: Everdingen
.
Savery inherited the See also: gaudy See also: style of the Breughels, which he carried into the 17th century; whilst Everdingen realized the large and effective See also: system of coloured and powerfully shaded landscape which marks the precursors of See also: Rembrandt
.
It is not easy on this account to believe that Savery was Everdingen's master, while it is quite within the range of probability that he acquired the elements of landscape See also: painting from de Molyn
.
Pieter de Molyn, by See also: birth a Londoner, lived from 1624 till 1661 in Haarlem
.
He went periodically on visits to See also: Norway, and his works, though scarce, exhibit a broad and sweeping mode of execution, differing but slightly from that transferred at the opening of the 17th century from See also: Jan See also: van Goyen to See also: Solomon Ruysdael
.
His etchings have nearly the breadth and effect of those of Everdingen
.
It is still an open question when de Molyn wielded influence on his See also: clever See also: disciple
.
Alkmaar, a busy trading place near the Texel, had little of the picturesque for. an artist except polders and See also: downs or waves and sky
.
Accordingly we find Allart at first a painter of See also: coast scenery
.
But on one of his expeditions he is said to have been cast ashore in Norway, and during the repairs of his See also: ship he visited the inland valleys, and thus gave a new course to his See also: art
.
In early pieces he cleverly represents theSee also: sea in motion under varied, but mostly clouded, aspects of sky
.
Their general intonation is strong and See also: brown; and effects are rendered in a powerful
See also: key, but the execution is much more
See also: uniform than that of See also: Jacob Ruysdael
.
A dark scud lowering on a See also: rolling sea near the walls of See also: Flushing characterizes Everdingen's " Mouth of the Schelde " in the Hermitage at St See also: Petersburg
.
See also: Storm is the marked feature of sea-pieces in the Staedel or Robartes collections ; and a strand with wreckers at the See also: foot of a cliff in the See also: Munich Pinakothek may be a reminiscence of See also: personal adventure in Norway
.
But the See also: Norwegian coast was studied in calms as well as in See also: gales; and a See also: fine See also: canvas at Munich shows fishermen on a still and sunny See also: day taking See also: herrings to a smoking hut at the foot of a Norwegian crag
.
The earliest of Everdingen's sea-pieces bears the date of 1640
.
After 1645 we meet with nothing but representations of inland scenery, and particularly of Norwegian valleys, remarkable alike for wildness and a decisive See also: depth of See also: tone
.
The master's favourite theme is a fall in a glen, with mournful fringes of pines interspersed with birch, and log-huts at the See also: base of rocks and craggy slopes
.
The See also: water tumbles over the foreground, so as to entitle the painter to the name of " inventor of cascades." It gives Everdingen his character as a precursor of Jacob Ruysdael in a certain See also: form of landscape composition; but though very skilful in arrangement and clever in effects, Everdingen remains much more See also: simple in execution; he is mucJi less subtle in feeling or varied in touch than his See also: great and incomparable countryman
.
Five of Everdingen's cascades are in the museum of See also: Copenhagen alone: of these, one is dated 1647, another r649
.
In the See also: Hermit-age at St Petersburg is a fine example of 1647; another in the Pinakothek at Munich was finished in 1656
.
See also: English public galleries ignore Everdingen; but one of his best-known master-pieces is the Norwegian glen belonging to See also: Lord Listowel
.
Of his etchings and drawings there are much larger and more numerous specimens in See also: England than elsewhere
.
Being a col-See also: lector as well as an engraver and painter, he brought together a large number of works of all kinds and masters; and the sale of these by his heirs at Amsterdam on the 11th of See also: March 1676 gives an approximate
See also: clue to the date of the painter's death
.
His two See also: brothers, Jan and Caesar, were both painters
.
CAESAR VAN EVERDINGEN (1606-1679), mainly known as a portrait painter, enjoyed some vogue during his See also: life, and many of his pictures are to be seen in the museums and private houses of
See also: Holland
.
They show a certain cleverness, but are far from entitling him to•rank as a master
.
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