Dutch painter and engraver (1628-1682)
5 total works indexed
· 1992 · cited 41,115x
· 2020 · cited 34,710x
· 2017 · cited 32,862x
· 1960 · cited 31,236x
· 1984 · cited 28,494x
via Crossref · CC0
Jacob Isaackszoon van Ruisdael ( Dutch pronunciation: [ˈjaːkɔp fɑn ˈrœyzdaːl] ; c. 1629 – 10 March 1682) was a Dutch painter, draughtsman, and etcher. He is generally considered the pre-eminent landscape painter of the Dutch Golden Age, a period of great wealth and cultural achievement when Dutch painting became highly popular.
Prolific and versatile, Ruisdael depicted a wide variety of landscape subjects. From 1646 he painted Dutch countryside scenes of remarkable quality for a young man. After a trip to Germany in 1650, his landscapes took on a more heroic character. In his late work, conducted when he lived and worked in Amsterdam, he added city panoramas and seascapes to his regular repertoire. In these, the sky often took up two-thirds of the canvas. In total he produced more than 150 Scandinavian views featuring waterfalls.
via Wikipedia infobox
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).