Jacob van Ruisdael: Wheat Fields

Wheat Fields by Jacob van Ruisdael, circa 1670
Wheat Fields by Jacob van Ruisdael, circa 1670

A Sublime Vision of the Dutch Countryside. In this masterpiece of 17th-century Dutch painting, Ruisdael offers a sublime vision of the Netherlands countryside where a dialogue unfolds between sky and earth.

“Wheat Fields” captivates first through its sky—a veritable operatic theater where a dramatic ballet of monumental clouds plays out. This celestial choreography occupies two-thirds of the composition, asserting the predominance of natural forces over humble human activity. Below, a winding path guides our gaze across the fields toward a grove of trees silhouetted against the horizon. The tiny figures of strollers emphasize the scale of the landscape and our insignificance against the elements.
The subtle palette, dominated by muted greens and silvery blues, reveals perfect mastery of luminous transitions and atmospheric values, capturing with remarkable accuracy the very essence of the Dutch landscape.

Essential Information

  • Wheat Fields by Jacob van Ruisdael, circa 1670
  • Dimensions: 100 x 130.2 cm
  • Location: The Metropolitan Museum of Art, Fifth Avenue, New York, Gallery 615
  • https://www.metmuseum.org/art/collection/search/437549

Jacob van Ruisdael (circa 1628-1682) was undoubtedly the greatest landscape painter of the Dutch Golden Age, elevating this genre—considered minor at the time—to the level of high pictorial poetry. Born in Haarlem to a family of artists, this precocious genius developed a personal style very early in his career. Unlike his contemporaries who often painted idealized landscapes, Ruisdael found transcendent material in ordinary scenes of his native country. His vision transformed these everyday views into meditations on the human condition and the forces of nature.

Ruisdael’s influence was decisive for subsequent generations of landscape painters, from Constable to the Romantics, who recognized him as the first artist to capture not only the appearance of landscape but also its spiritual and emotional dimensions.