Object Results
Photo Credit: photo: T. Rodriguez
View
Zoomable Image
Bookmark (persistent url): https://dac-collection.wesleyan.edu/objects-1/info/7210
The Four Windmills
165017th century
117 x 170 mm (4.6 x 6.7 in.)
Wenceslaus Hollar, Bohemian, (1607–1677)
After Jan Brueghel, the younger, Dutch (Flemish), (1601–1678)
- landscapes (representations) - Use for creative works that depict outdoor scenes where the picture is dominated by the configuration, visual and aesthetic, of the land, bodies of water, and natural elements. When the ocean or other large body of water dominates the picture, use "seascapes." For images that are more documentary than creative, prefer "views" or "topographical views." For actual areas of land having certain notable characteristics, use "landscapes (environments)." [January 1993 scope note added; related term added. April 1991 descriptor moved; lead-in term added; descriptor changed, was "landscapes"; alternate term changed, was 'landscape'.]
- windmills
- plate Dimensions: 117 x 170 mm (4.6 x 6.7 in.)
Please see the DAC Open Access Images Policy and ReadMe PDF. This policy is similar to the concise No Known Copyright statement at RightsStatements.org.
To download an image, control-click or right-click on a link below, then select "Download," "Save Link," or a similar choice in your web browser.
DAC Open Access Image: JPEG, < 2 MB (Help)
DAC Open Access Image: TIFF, ~20-40 MB (Help)
Please use this image credit line:
Open Access Image from the Davison Art Center, Wesleyan University
(photo: T. Rodriguez)
.
Wenceslaus Hollar, Bohemian, (1607–1677) Jan Brueghel, the younger, Dutch (Flemish), (1601–1678) . The Four Windmills, 1650. Etching on laid paper. Only state, Pennington first of two states. plate : 117 x 170 mm (4.6 x 6.7 in.). DAC accession number 1940.D1.129. Gift of George W. Davison (BA Wesleyan 1892), 1940. Open Access Image from the Davison Art Center, Wesleyan University (photo: T. Rodriguez) .
Your search criteria: Keyword is "GNXV" and [Objects]Display Artist is "Wenceslaus Hollar after Jan Brueghel the Younger".
View current selection of records as: