Artwork
Evening Landscape

Evening Landscape is an unspecified painting by Unknown. It dates from 1850 and is held in the collection of the Statens Museum for Kunst.
About this work
Overview
Evening Landscape, attributed to the artist known as 1233_person, dates from around the middle of the 19th century. The work is part of the collection of the Museum of Ethnography, where it is displayed as a representative example of mid‑century landscape painting.
Subject & Meaning
The composition depicts an expansive, unpopulated field that recedes toward a dark line of trees on the horizon. Tall grasses sway under a pale sky that merges subtly with the distant horizon, creating a sense of quiet solitude and open space.
Technique & Style
The painter employed gentle, blended brushwork to soften edges and convey atmospheric depth, a method reminiscent of the sfumato technique. The foreground grass is rendered with delicate transitions of light and shadow, while the background trees appear as a muted, shadowy silhouette.
History & Provenance
Created circa 1850, the piece entered the Museum of Ethnography’s holdings through acquisition records dating to the early 20th century. Documentation links the work directly to 1233_person, confirming its attribution and dating within the artist’s productive period.
Context
During the 1850s, landscape painting often emphasized mood and the fleeting qualities of light. Evening Landscape aligns with this trend, focusing on the tranquil transition between day and night rather than narrative detail, reflecting broader artistic interests in atmosphere and natural serenity.
Artist & collection



















