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The old town hall-Old Raet-Huys The old town hall

Experience Jacob van der Ulft’s ‘The Old Town Hall’. A detailed Dutch cityscape painting capturing 17th-century life & architecture. Hand-painted reproductions available.

Jacob van der Ulft (1627-1689) was a Dutch painter renowned for architectural views, cityscapes, Italianate landscapes & masterful stained glass work. He served as both artist and mayor of Gorinchem.

Hand Made Oil Reproduction

Hand-painted oil on canvas in your size and frame, made to order by our artists. (Buy Print Buy PrintBuy Image Buy Image)

P118B $10
P118H $10
P118W $10
P438Z $10
P508JH $12
P508YH $12
P805H $10
P805Z $10
P919BZ $10
P919G $10
P919XJ $10
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P968JZ $12
W106C $8
W218G $10
W218JH $8
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W307PJ $10
W316G $10
W316PJ $8
W316Y $10
W398PJ $8
W4111J $10
W500HY $15
W500JH $15
W692G $12
W849H $8
W940BG $15
W953PJ $8

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You may enter your own dimensions to fit a specific frame or space. If your selected size does not match the original image's proportions, we will either crop the artwork or extend the painting with additional hand-painted elements. A digital mockup will be sent for your approval before production begins.
Please note that the on-screen preview does not reflect the actual cropping or extension. Only the mockup will accurately show the final composition.
While custom sizes are available, we recommend selecting a dimension from the predefined list to preserve the original proportions.

Examples of what can be changed: Replace face with customer photo; Add pet (e.g., replace cat with dog); Include hidden message in background; Change background landscape or elements.
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Total Price

$ 263

reproduction

The old town hall-Old Raet-Huys The old town hall

Reproduction Medium

Reproduction Size

-

Total Price

$ 263


Artist Biography

The Architect of Imaginary Rome

In the golden twilight of the Dutch Golden Age, few figures embodied the era's unique blend of civic duty and artistic wanderlust as profoundly as Jacob van der Ulft. Born in the fortified town of Gorinchem around 1627, his life was a remarkable tapestry woven from the threads of administrative power and delicate artistry. As the son of a mayor, Van der Ulft was destined for a life of prominence within the Dutch Republic, eventually ascending to the office of burgomaster himself between 1660 and 1679. Yet, beneath the weight of political responsibility lay the soul of a visionary, an artist capable of transporting his viewers from the bustling streets of the Netherlands to the sun-drenched, ancient ruins of a Rome he likely never visited.

Van der Ulft’s artistry was characterized by a profound sense of architectural precision and a mastery of the capriccio—a genre of painting that blends real topographical elements with imaginary, often fantastical, classical structures. While his official duties required him to document the fortifications and heraldic shields of Gorinchem, his private passion led him toward the creation of expansive Italianate landscapes. These works, often executed in pen-and-ink, washes, or gouache, possess a structural integrity that suggests the eye of an architect. He had a singular ability to evoke the grandeur of the Pantheon, the Forum, and the Temple of Vesta, using prints and sketches from travelers as his guides to reconstruct a lost classical world with startling authenticity.

A Master of Light and Glass

Beyond the sweeping vistas of his landscapes, Van der Ulft achieved a specialized renown that set him apart from his contemporaries: the art of the glass painter. The esteemed biographer Arnold Houbraken once lauded him as perhaps the finest glass painter of his century, a title earned through his painstaking efforts to revive and refine the techniques of masters like Dirk and Wouter Crabeth. This facet of his work required not just an eye for composition, but a deep understanding of how light interacts with color and transparency. His stained glass contributions, often adorning churches and civic buildings throughout Holland, brought biblical narratives and heraldic emblems to life through a luminous, ethereal glow.

His technical development was deeply intertwined with the intellectual currents of his time. Much like the dilettante draughtsman Jan de Bisschop, Van der Ulft’s style reflected a sophisticated engagement with the broader European tradition. His drawings and paintings often mirrored the delicate handling of light and architectural detail found in De Bisschop's work, suggesting a shared aesthetic language among the Dutch elite who pursued art as both a passion and a scholarly endeavor. This period of his life was marked by an intense study of form, where the boundaries between documentation and imagination became beautifully blurred.

Legacy of a Multifaceted Visionary

The later years of Van der Ulft’s life were marked by transition and movement. Following accusations of corruption in 1679 that forced him from his political stronghold in Gorinchem, he relocated to Noordwijk. Even in this period of personal upheaval, his creative output remained a testament to his resilience. He continued to refine his landscapes and architectural views, leaving behind a body of work that serves as a vital link between the meticulous topographical traditions of the Netherlands and the romanticized classical ideals of the Baroque era.

The historical significance of Jacob van der Ulft lies in his ability to bridge disparate worlds. He was simultaneously a man of the state and a man of the brush, a recorder of local history and a creator of universal myth. His legacy is preserved not only in the surviving oil paintings and intricate drawings held in prestigious collections like the Rijksmuseum but also in the enduring charm of his imagined ruins. Through his work, the architectural splendor of antiquity was kept alive in the Dutch imagination, ensuring that even those who never crossed the Alps could feel the weight of history and the light of the Mediterranean sun.

Jacob van der Ulft

Jacob van der Ulft

1627 - 1689 , Netherlands

Quick Facts

  • Artistic Movement Or Style: Italianate Landscape Painting
  • Artists Or Movements Influenced By This Artist: ['Dutch Golden Age']
  • Artists Who Influenced This Artist: ['Pieter Jansz Saenredam']
  • Date Of Birth: 1627
  • Date Of Death: 1689
  • Full Name: Jacob van der Ulft
  • Nationality: Dutch
  • Notable Artworks:
    • An Italianate Capriccio In A Mediterranean Harbour
    • An Imaginary View Of 'het Tolhuis' On The River
  • Place Of Birth: Gorinchem, Netherlands
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