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This painting is the finest example of the artist’s early work in the National Maritime Museum’s collection and represents the variety inherent within the artist’s subject matter. The industrious scene of Dutch and Flemish ships being loaded with timber is set in a natural harbour along a Scandinavian fjord. Large numbers of tree-trunks have been brought down into the bay in the left foreground, where they have been bundled into the water by numerous workmen. The ships inshore are loaded through stern ports. The stern of the large vessel on the left is decorated with a depiction of the Virgin Mary, identifying the ship’s origin as the Catholic Southern Netherlands. To the right an Amsterdam merchantman, followed by other vessels in the distance, arrives on the scene.
Title
Dutch Ships Loading Timber in a Northern Port
Date
1610–1620
Medium
oil on panel
Measurements
H 43 x W 94 cm
Accession number
BHC0750
Work type
Painting
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