View of Olinda (Post)

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Year1662
MediumOil on canvas
Dimensions107.5 cm × 172.5 cm (42.3 in × 67.9 in)
View of Olinda
ArtistFrans Post
Year1662
MediumOil on canvas
Dimensions107.5 cm × 172.5 cm (42.3 in × 67.9 in)
LocationRijksmuseum, Amsterdam

View of Olinda is a painting by Frans Post, a Dutch painter who was one of the first European-trained painters to depict landscapes of the Americas during a trip with John Maurice of the WIC.[1] The painting depicts Olinda Cathedral in ruins, damage that was sustained when the Dutch seized a portion of Brazil from the Portuguese.[2] The painting is notable for its depiction of Brazilian animals and plant life, based on drawings Post made from life in Brazil.[3] The painting has its original frame, which is also decorated with motifs from nature.[4]

Post was part of Johan Maurits' (aka John Maurice)’s entourage when he visited Brazil from 1637-1644.[5] Johan Maurits was Prince of Nassau-Siegen, a state within the Holy Roman Empire at the time, and governor of the Dutch West India Company (WIC).[4] Post was just 23 years old and relatively unknown at the time he embarked for Brazil in October 1636, and the journey across the Atlantic took about two months.[3] Not much is known about his formal training or how he was chosen for the expedition.[3] The goal of the journey was to grow Dutch territory and ease conflict in the region.[3] At the time there were about 2,000 European colonists in Brazil, and the majority of them were affiliated with WIC.[3] Post was brought along as part of Maurits' entourage which consisted of other artists, scientists, and naturalists, their job being to document Brazil's natural life and landscape.[3] The trip yielded hundreds of drawings.[3]

Upon Post's return to the Netherlands, he enjoyed success as a painter.[3]

Creation

View of Olinda is dated 1662, eighteen years after Post left Brazil and returned to Haarlem, the city of his birth.[3] It is one of about 155 oil paintings Post did over the span of decades, based on what he saw in Brazil.[4] It features depictions of plants native to Brazil growing next to plants native to Europe (the Dutch colonizers’ homeland) and plants from Africa (another continent the Dutch were colonizing).[4]

Ironically, Post's paintings were meant to depict Dutch pride and colonization, but the images feature mostly Portuguese-built structures amidst tropical landscapes.[5] Post was still making paintings of his studies from Brazil after the Dutch's (albeit brief) occupation had ended.[5] It is for his paintings of Brazil and the Dutch occupation there that Post is most known.[3]

Description

The Frame

References

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