Vilhelm Hammershøi (1864–1916)
From a Farm, Refsnæs, 1900
Oil on canvas
From a Farm, Refsnæs was painted during Ida and Vilhelm Hammershøi’s summer sojourn at Refsnæs in West Zealand in 1900. Hammershøi has depicted the whitewashed farmhouse ‘Kildevang’ near Kongstrup, northwest of Kalundborg where the couple stayed for a few weeks.
Hammershøi has worked with light and colour as well as with lines and surfaces in a manner reminiscent of his approach to interior scenes. He has staged his chosen subject with great care and deliberation, in fact to such an extent that the Danish farm – a place generally associated with teeming life, full of peasants, servants and animals – has become an disturbing empty, unreal, almost lifeless place. The farm is also depicted in an extremely pared-back form: compositionally, the dark, elongated fields of the thatched roofs contrast sharply with the whitewashed walls, the bright sky and open courtyard, emphasising the transverse format of the picture. The farmhouse is painted with meticulous care, especially the windows and the open and closed doors. Notably, Hammershøi has omitted to paint in the cobblestones covering the courtyard surface. Presumably they would disrupt the clear form.
A nearly invisible, white plume of smoke rises vertically from the chimney, dissolving against the almost colourless sky in which Hammershøi’s many small brushstrokes, saturated with light, create a strong sense of presence. The smoke indicates that there is no wind. At the same time, it emphasises that, contrary to all appearances, there are in fact people at the farm even if there is not a single person to be seen.
Like so many other scenes depicted by Hammershøi, this painting is deliberately devoid of life and narrative, thereby making room for registrations of various light phenomena: the light in the sky, the way it plays on and between the whitewashed farm buildings, and the glints and reflections bouncing off the windows. These light phenomena evoke a metaphysical mood, leaving the work inscrutably enigmatic.
Hammershøi has worked with light and colour as well as with lines and surfaces in a manner reminiscent of his approach to interior scenes. He has staged his chosen subject with great care and deliberation, in fact to such an extent that the Danish farm – a place generally associated with teeming life, full of peasants, servants and animals – has become an disturbing empty, unreal, almost lifeless place. The farm is also depicted in an extremely pared-back form: compositionally, the dark, elongated fields of the thatched roofs contrast sharply with the whitewashed walls, the bright sky and open courtyard, emphasising the transverse format of the picture. The farmhouse is painted with meticulous care, especially the windows and the open and closed doors. Notably, Hammershøi has omitted to paint in the cobblestones covering the courtyard surface. Presumably they would disrupt the clear form.
A nearly invisible, white plume of smoke rises vertically from the chimney, dissolving against the almost colourless sky in which Hammershøi’s many small brushstrokes, saturated with light, create a strong sense of presence. The smoke indicates that there is no wind. At the same time, it emphasises that, contrary to all appearances, there are in fact people at the farm even if there is not a single person to be seen.
Like so many other scenes depicted by Hammershøi, this painting is deliberately devoid of life and narrative, thereby making room for registrations of various light phenomena: the light in the sky, the way it plays on and between the whitewashed farm buildings, and the glints and reflections bouncing off the windows. These light phenomena evoke a metaphysical mood, leaving the work inscrutably enigmatic.