The Jewish Cemetery


The Jewish Cemetery is an oil on canvas painting by the Dutch landscape painter Jacob van Ruisdael.
It is an example of Dutch Golden Age painting and is now in the collection of the Detroit Institute of Arts.
This painting was documented by John Smith in 1835, who wrote: "60. The Cemetery. This grand and affecting picture exhibits the ruins of a church and convent upon the summit of a hill, occupying the whole extent of the view in the second
distance, the declivity of which presents a cemetery, interspersed with large stones. On the foreground are a broken
tree lying across a rapid stream, a tomb of black marble, with an inscription on it; a row of three sarcophagi extending
along the front; and on the left stands a cluster of large umbrageous trees, the verdant hues of whose foliage is contrasted by the leafless trunk of a beech. Three persons in
black are seen near a small tomb on the side of the hill, musing amidst the tombs. The grandeur and solemnity of the scene
is strikingly enhanced by rolling stormy clouds, in which may be perceived the evanescent colours of a rainbow.
4 ft. 6 in. by 5 ft. 9 in.—C.
In this excellent picture, the artist has evidently intended to convey a moral lesson of human life ; and in addition to this, there is
a sublimity of sentiment and effect reigning throughout the composition which renders it worthy of the powers of Nicolo Poussin.
The Writer has been informed that this picture was purchased by Mr. Huybens, of a banker
at Paris, about the year 1815, for the sum of 20,000 fs., 800l., and sold to Mr. George Gillows, of whose executors it was brought by
Mr. Zachary, and was subsequently sold, in the sale of that gentleman's collection, by Mr. Phillips, in 1828, for 870 gs. ; it is now in
the possession of Mackintosh, Esq.
A duplicate of the preceding picture, but differing in size, and inferior in quality, having become dark from time, is in the Dresden Gallery.
3 ft. by 3 ft. 5 in.—C."
This scene is very similar to other paintings of ruins Ruisdael made in this period and these often served as inspiration for later painters of landscape.
Later historians have traced earlier drawings by Ruisdael and concluded that the scene is actually a pastiche of two locations; a view of the Jewish cemetery 'Beth Haim' in Ouderkerk aan de Amstel with the ruins of Egmond Abbey in Egmond-Binnen.