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
The Dutch Republic’s pride in its successful maritime endeavors like fishing, shipbuilding, and foreign trade contributed to the great popularity of marine paintings like this one. Such coastal scenes were one of the most popular landscape genres on the market. Here, the fishing vessels used to catch herring, called herring busses, float atop a glassy sea that stretches to meet the low horizon, disappearing into the expansive sky full of billowing clouds. Atop the ships’ tall masts, Dutch flags flutter in the wind.
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Willem van de Velde (II) — A Harbor
Jan van de Cappelle — Fishing Boats in a Calm
Willem van de Velde (II) — Schepen voor de kust
Hendrick Jacobsz. Dubbels — Calm Sea
Willem van de Velde (II) — Ships at Anchor on the Coast
Willem van de Velde (II) — Fishing Boats on Shore (The Shore
Jan Claesz. Rietschoof — A Calm (Ships in the Harbor by Calm
Jan van Goyen — Fishing Boats off an Estuary
Lieve Pietersz. Verschuier — Caulking of a Vessel
Salomon van Ruysdael — Fishing Boats on a River
Willem van de Velde II — Entrance to a Dutch Port
Willem van de Velde (II) — A Calm at Sea