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The Hunt in the Forest

Image credit: Ashmolean Museum, Oxford

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Celebrated in his lifetime as a painter of perspective and of animals and landscape, Uccello was a versatile artist who worked at times on mosaic and stained-glass design. This painting is a late work, probably of c.1470. It is a highly original painting, both as a nocturnal landscape and as a brilliantly structured composition. Uccello mapped out a grid on the panel's surface as a guide for his design, fixing a central vanishing point. The devices of the huntsmen's spears, the cut branches and logs and the area of water denote this coherent space, inhabited by the receding forms of men and animals. Uccello's approach is also highly decorative, with bright, clear colours set off against a dark background: the foliage of the trees was once picked out with gold, accentuating the precious, mosaic-like effect.

Ashmolean Museum, Oxford

Oxford

Title

The Hunt in the Forest

Date

c. 1470

Medium

tempera & oil, with traces of gold, on panel

Measurements

H 73.3 x W 177 cm

Accession number

WA1850.31

Acquisition method

Fox-Strangways Gift, 1850

Work type

Painting

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Ashmolean Museum, Oxford

Beaumont Street, Oxford, Oxfordshire OX1 2PH England

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