The 9 square puzzle using just a portion of a fine painting by Dutch artist Willem Van de Velde II (1633-1707). When the puzzle is
complete, you will jump to a 16 square puzzle with the same image.
To go there directly, click the red square.
Information about the artist can be found
below.
The 16
square puzzle using the fine painting by Dutch artist Willem Van de Velde II. When the puzzle is complete, you
will jump to a 25
square puzzle with the same image.
You can go there directly by clicking the red square.
The 25 square
puzzle using the fine painting by Dutch artist Willem Van de Velde II. When the puzzle is complete, you will
jump to a 36 square puzzle
with the same image.
You can go there directly by clicking the red square.
The 36 square
puzzle using the fine painting by Dutch artist Willem Van de Velde II. When the puzzle is complete, you will
jump to
a 49 square puzzle with the same image.
You can go there directly by clicking the red square.
The 49 square
puzzle using using the fine painting by Dutch artist Willem Van de Velde II. When the
puzzle is complete, you will jump to a 64 square puzzle with the same image.
To go there directly, click the red square.
The 64 square puzzle using using the fine painting by Dutch artist Willem Van de
Velde II. This
puzzle is getting harder. Congratulations if you succeed. The applet permits up to a ten square puzzle. If there is
any interest in my listing
a puzzle of greater difficulty, drop
me a
line and I'll add it in. Information about the artist can be found below.
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The image
is just a portion of 'The Gust', a magnificent marine painting by Dutch artist Willem Van de Velde II (1633-1707), painted c. 1680.
The work is in the collection of the Rijksmuseum. You may see a splendid original giant image of the work
here.
And I do mean splendid! The work was painted in England and is an oil on canvas of 77 x 63.5 cm in size. More of the artist's
work can be seen here & here. While this site
will never claim to be a true 'fine arts' site, my hope is that the site may stimulate an interest in fine art in its
visitors. I am puzzled therefore why other museums which show generally small & poor quality images of works of
worldwide interest, generally liberally referenced to matters of copyright, do not
approach the subject as do the few. Including Daystar Visions. Please do look for yourself at their image (link above). It is
brilliant. I did try to reduce the size of the image for use on this page to permit the boat in the left of the original
to show on screen & also the dramatic sky in the top of the work. But I lost so much detail in the rigging that I gave
up. Better to show a part of the image in its full glory than more of it in poor quality.
I was not, in fact, able to find out very much about the artist. The
artist is considered to be the most renowned marine artist of his day & came from an established family of artists. He
was born on Dec. 18, 1633 in Leiden, a small Dutch town north & east of The Hague, the
oldest son of Willem Van de Velde the Elder (c. 1611-1693). Willem Van de Velde the Elder was a noted artist in his own
right who also specialised in marine
painting; his father was the son of a naval captain, his brother was a skipper of merchant vessels, and he himself spent
part of his youth as a sailor before devoting himself to the drawing and painting of ships. The family had moved to
Amsterdam by 1636 and it is believed that the artist
was a pupil of Simon de Vlieger (c. 1600-1653) (One
of that artist's works). Both father and son could reasonably be described as the
'war
photographers', if you will, of their day. In 1672/3, father and son moved, for reasons unknown, to London, England, where
they worked
for Charles II and the Duke of York. They lived in Greenwich & later in Westminster
& much of the artist's work was
produced in England. The artist was appointed a painter to the English court in 1677. The fine rendering of detail and
texture, the balanced composition, the brilliant use of light, all so evident in this painting, are his hallmarks. One site
that I visited when this page was first created suggested that his work, then,
in about 2001, ranged in value from U.S. $180,000 to U.S. $2.8 million. The
artist died in 1707 but the exact date eludes me. He was however buried in London on Apl. 11, 1677 in St. James,
Piccadilly.
You may like to look at the image portion I have used without the distraction of the
puzzle. So here it is.
This page is really not intended to stray too far from its subject matter. But you really
should view the 'pen painting' of the
Battle of Terheide, the work of Willem Van de Velde the Elder. The
naval battle took place between the Dutch and the English on Aug. 10, 1653 with much loss of life but really
no victor. The artist was at the scene, indeed he pictured himself in the painting ~ in the foreground boat
to the left of the painting, sitting down with a drawing board on his knee. The work, itself, was painted in 1657. Pen
painting is a 17th century technique that is surely explained on the Rijksmuseum site. An enlargement on that site
clearly used to show the artist busy at work. It is probably still there but, to
me at least, is difficult to find.
Return to top of page.
The java applet that runs the puzzle is courtesy of Axel Fontaine, who lived
just south of the city of Brussels in Belgium. Axel invited free use of his fine applet which you can, I hope,
download here. Axel, we thank you!
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