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Landscape and Labor. Dutch Works on Paper in Van Gogh鈥檚 Time

Dec 21, 2024 - Jun 22, 2025

Although Vincent van Gogh (1853鈥1890) is today perhaps the most famous Dutch artist of all, in his own time he was relatively little known, especially when compared to artists of the Hague School. This group, named for the city where many of its members trained and worked, was comprised of those who had different styles but shared a devotion to the depiction of everyday life, looking to the Dutch countryside for their subjects and themes. The Hague School artists achieved international fame, and in the early 1900s US collectors and museums鈥攊ncluding the MFA鈥攅agerly sought their works. But over the decades the group鈥檚 fame faded.

鈥淟andscape and Labor: Dutch Works on Paper in Van Gogh鈥檚 Time鈥 presents the Hague School at its best. Visitors can see watercolors, prints, and drawings by artists such as Jan Hendrik Weissenbruch (1824鈥1903), Anton van Rappard (1858鈥1892), and Anton Mauve (1838鈥1888). Though they are not now household names in the United States, these figures had a profound impact on the artists of their time and future generations. Mauve, in particular, played a key role in Van Gogh鈥檚 early life and career. Van Gogh himself is also represented here, with two early works.

The Hague School artists focused on farmers, fisherfolk, laborers, mills, canals, and dunes as their subjects, in part to convey a patriotic love of the countryside. In the densely populated and rapidly industrializing Netherlands, rural subjects recalled a simpler time and a simpler way of life鈥攂oth of which were quickly disappearing. This exhibition shines a light once more on a neglected group of artists who, working in a changing time, captured vanishing ways of life using modern artistic styles as their tools.



Although Vincent van Gogh (1853鈥1890) is today perhaps the most famous Dutch artist of all, in his own time he was relatively little known, especially when compared to artists of the Hague School. This group, named for the city where many of its members trained and worked, was comprised of those who had different styles but shared a devotion to the depiction of everyday life, looking to the Dutch countryside for their subjects and themes. The Hague School artists achieved international fame, and in the early 1900s US collectors and museums鈥攊ncluding the MFA鈥攅agerly sought their works. But over the decades the group鈥檚 fame faded.

鈥淟andscape and Labor: Dutch Works on Paper in Van Gogh鈥檚 Time鈥 presents the Hague School at its best. Visitors can see watercolors, prints, and drawings by artists such as Jan Hendrik Weissenbruch (1824鈥1903), Anton van Rappard (1858鈥1892), and Anton Mauve (1838鈥1888). Though they are not now household names in the United States, these figures had a profound impact on the artists of their time and future generations. Mauve, in particular, played a key role in Van Gogh鈥檚 early life and career. Van Gogh himself is also represented here, with two early works.

The Hague School artists focused on farmers, fisherfolk, laborers, mills, canals, and dunes as their subjects, in part to convey a patriotic love of the countryside. In the densely populated and rapidly industrializing Netherlands, rural subjects recalled a simpler time and a simpler way of life鈥攂oth of which were quickly disappearing. This exhibition shines a light once more on a neglected group of artists who, working in a changing time, captured vanishing ways of life using modern artistic styles as their tools.



Contact details

Sunday - Tuesday
10:00 AM - 4:45 PM
Wednesday - Friday
10:00 AM - 9:45 PM
Saturday
10:00 AM - 4:45 PM
465 Huntington Avenue Back Bay - Boston, MA, USA 02115

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