Not currently on view
In the collection of Cleveland Museum of Art, Cleveland · as of July 2026
FROM THE CLEVELAND MUSEUM OF ART’S CATALOG
Martin is best known for his grandiose, apocalyptic visions of approaching doom, drawn from the Bible or mythology. But these two landscapes, created as pendants, reveal a less known aspect of his work. Martin executed a number of small landscape studies in a distinctive stippled technique, allowing him to render extraordinary detail. The mood of these landscapes is subdued; classical figures recline and play music beside a tranquil lake. However, their anthropomorphic trees and the suggestion of the vastness of the surrounding landscape foreshadow what was to become Martin’s central theme: the smallness and helplessness of man against the infinite powers of the universe.
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Ruins of an Ancient City
View on the South Downs
The Valley of the Tyne, My Native Country near Henshaw
Joshua Commanding the Sun to Stand Still Upon Gibeon (Joshua
Figures Seated by a Lake in a Wooded Landscape
Text and cover, from Illustrations of the Bible
Fall of Nineveh, from Illustrations of the Bible
Paradise Lost: Adam and Eve Driven out of Paradise
Paul Sandby — Man and Dog Seated Below Trees by River
Jacob van Mosscher (Dutch, 1655) — Peasants at the Edge of a
Ferdinand Kobell — Landscape with Lovers
Anonymous — Mediterranean Landscape with a Villa in the Dist
Anonymous — Landscape
Adam Friedrich Oeser — Shady Grove with Nymph Seated Under T
Jan de Bisschop — A Sunken Track with Travelers outside Brus
Jean-Honoré Fragonard (French, 1732–1806) — Scene in a Park
Follower of Jean Baptiste Claude Chatelain — Fisherman and F
Thomas Gainsborough — Wooded Landscape with Stream
Claude Lorrain (French, 1604–1682) — View of the Acqua Aceto
James "Drunken" Robertson — Lane Scene, Dorking