Architectural painting
Architectural painting is a form of genre painting where the predominant focus lies on architecture, including both outdoor and interior views. While architecture was present in many of the earliest paintings and illuminations, it was mainly used as background or to provide rhythm to a painting. In the Renaissance, architecture was used to emphasize the perspective and create a sense of depth, like in Masaccio's Holy Trinity from the 1420s.
In Western art, architectural painting as an independent genre developed in the 16th century in Flanders and the Netherlands, and reached its peak in 16th and 17th century Dutch painting. Later, it developed in a tool for Romantic paintings, with e.g. views of ruins becoming very popular. Closely related genres are architectural fantasies and trompe-l'oeils, especially illusionistic ceiling painting, and cityscapes.
Western artists specialized in architectural painting
16th century
The 16th century saw the development of architectural painting as a separate genre in Western art. The main centers in this period were Flanders and the Netherlands. The first important architectural painter was Dutch Hans Vredeman de Vries, who was both an architect and a painter. Students of Hans Vredeman de Vries, both in Flanders and in the Netherlands, include his sons Salomon and Paul, and Hendrik van Steenwijk I. Through them the genre was popularized and their family and students turned it into one of the main domains of Dutch [Golden Age painting].Flanders
Netherlands
- Hans Vredeman de Vries
- Hendrik van Steenwijk I, the first to specialize in church interiors
17th century
Flanders
- Pieter Neefs the Elder
- Hendrik van Steenwijk II
- Lodewijck Neefs
- Wolfgang de Smet
- Pieter Neefs the Younger
- Erasmus de Bie, between cityscapes and architectural painting proper
- Wilhelm Schubert van Ehrenberg
- Jacobus Ferdinandus Saey
- Lievin Cruyl
Italy
- Viviano Codazzi
- Ascanio Luciano
- Andrea Pozzo, mainly illusionistic paintings
- Luigi Quaini, not a pure architectural painter, but a contributor of architecture to other paintings
Netherlands
In the 17th century, architectural painting became one of the leading genres in the Dutch Golden Age, together with portrait painting and landscapes. Notable Dutch painter of the genre include:- Hendrik van Steenwijk II
- Bartholomeus van Bassen
- Pieter van der Stock
- Pieter Jansz. Saenredam
- Gerard Houckgeest
- Susanna van Steenwijk
- Dirck van Delen
- Daniël de Blieck
- Hendrick Cornelisz. van Vliet : mainly church interiors
- Emanuel de Witte
- Job Adriaenszoon Berckheyde
- Jan van der Heyden
- Gerrit Adriaenszoon Berckheyde
- Caspar van Wittel
18th century
France
Italy
Architectural paintings, and the related vedute or cityscapes, were especially popular in 18th century Italy. Another genre closely related to architectural painting proper were the capriccios, fantasies set in and focusing on an imaginary architecture.Netherlands
19th century
Austria
Belgium
Denmark
France
Germany
- Wilhelm Barth
- Michael Neher
- Eduard Gaertner
- Max Emanuel Ainmiller
- Friedrich August Elsasser
- Hermann Gemmel
- Adolf Seel
Italy
United Kingdom
- Samuel Prout, watercolours
- Thomas H. Shepherd, watercolours
Modern art
- Colin Campbell Cooper, paintings of skyscrapers
- Eugeniusz Molski, Polish painter