Not currently on view
In the collection of Art Institute of Chicago, Chicago · as of July 2026
FROM THE ART INSTITUTE OF CHICAGO’S CATALOG
In contrast to Rembrandt’s dark, linear etching and burin work, landscape etcher Allart van Everdingen created a group of evocative, softly toned nocturnal prints and book illustrations using an early form of mezzotint engraving. Here a dilapidated house and a church spire emerge from the murky darkness. The chronology of Everdingen’s ten early mezzotints remains inconclusive, for none are dated. However, this plate’s variety of intaglio media and the seepage of ink into the margins suggest an inventive search for new tonal effects on the part of the artist, which likely occurred before he learned about standard mezzotint methods in the later 1660s.
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Jean Baptiste Camille Corot — Wooded Countryside
Francis Seymour Haden — Horsley's House at Willesley
Jean Baptiste Camille Corot — Souvenir of Ostia
Jean Baptiste Camille Corot (French, 1796–1875) — A Souvenir
Charles Émile Jacque — Edge of a Wood, under Cloudy Sky
David Young Cameron (British, 1865–1945) — Pluscarden
Giovanni Fattori — Bauco, Near Rome (Bauco presso Roma)
Frank Anderson — Landscape
Auguste Delâtre|Charles Jacque — Mills at Montmartre
Fritz Overbeck — Blacksmith
Stephen Parrish — On the Schroon — Evening
John Clerk of Eldin — Stirling from Kinnsill