Landscape Art For Sale

Browse our selection of landscape art for sale. Our collection is ever evolving and diverse, so if you are not sure where to start, take a look at our landscape painting, drawing and photography.

Paul Bennett is a British artist who paints expressive abstract seascapes and landscapes from memory.

In contrast, Lisa Carney creates more textured canvases in which the landscape emerges from drips, splatters and evocative mark-making.

Painting in watercolours, Max Naylor creates dreamlike landscape paintings in mixed media. They are colourful and filled with semi-surreal imagery, inspired by his memory and imagination.

History of Landscape Art

The seventeenth century saw the development of two forms of landscape art: Classical and Naturalistic. The Classical style was developed by Claude Lorraine and Nicholas Poussin who treated the landscape in a highly stylised and artificial way, attempting to evoke the landscape of classical Greece and Rome. Meanwhile, the Naturalistic style was developed by Dutch landscape painters such as Jacob van Ruysdael and was based upon what they saw around them.

Landscape painting became increasingly popular throughout the eighteenth century when the classical genre dominated. The nineteenth century gave way to an explosion in popularity of the naturalistic style, partly since people saw nature as a direct manifestation of God and partly due to the alienation of many people, as a result of growing industrialisation and urbanisation.

John Constable and J.M.W. Turner were two outstanding British contributors to the genre, but the baton was shortly passed on to France, where thanks to contemporary impressionists, landscape painting became a vehicle for revolution in Western painting and the traditional hierarchy of genres was dismantled.

During the latter half of the twentieth century, the definition of landscape was challenged, and the genre grew to encompass urban as well as industrial landscapes. In the 1960s, land artists such as Richard Long began to change the relationship between landscape and art by creating artworks directly within the landscape itself.

Styles and Techniques of Landscape Art

The majority of early landscapes were based upon imaginary settings and very few paintings depicted actual landscapes. It was not until the early 1870s with the introduction of ready-mixed oil paints in tubes, followed by the portable ‘box easel’, that en plein air painting became widely practiced and actual landscapes were used. Various techniques were used to convey organic natural forms in invented compositions, for instance Edgar Degas would copy cloud forms from a crumpled handkerchief held up against the light, while Cennino Cennini advised copying ragged crags from rough rocks.

In addition to the traditional landscape, there are various other forms of ‘-scape’ which depict different scenes, for instance: cityscapes, hardscapes – paved over areas such as streets and sidewalks, aerial landscapes which depict landscapes from above and inscapes – artworks which seek to convey the psychoanalytical view of the mind as a three-dimensional space.

Famous Landscape Artists

John Constable is among the most well-renowned British Landscape artists. He mostly depicted the Suffolk countryside, where he was born and lived. He completed many sketches en plein air, which he used to complete his large exhibition paintings that were finished in his studio. As a student at the Royal Academy schools, he exhibited from 1802 at the Royal Academy in London and later at the Paris salon. Constable influenced the Barbizon School as well as the French Romantic movement, and himself was influenced by Jacob van Ruisdael – yet his realism and vitality make his work original.

Van Ruisdael was one of the most prolific painters in the Dutch landscape painting movement who created poetic and often brooding landscapes. Born in Haarlem to a little-known painter named Isaac Jacobsz, he became a member of the Haarlem painters’ guild in 1648. From the late 1650s he painted waterfall scenes based upon the work of Allart van Everdingen, before settling in Amsterdam by 1657 where he is said to have also practised as a physician.

J.M.W. Turner, whose full name was Joseph Mallord William Turner, was perhaps the best-loved English Romantic artist. He worked in watercolour, oil and engravings and was known as the ‘painter of light’, due to his interest in brilliant colours as the main element of his landscapes and seascapes. He was born near Covent Garden and entered the Royal Academy schools in 1789. Turned bequeathed a great deal of his work to the nation, much of which is now displayed at Tate Britain.

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    Tracer by Peter Roux

    Tracer

    Paintings - 117x25 cm
    The Gathering by Jessica Matier

    The Gathering

    Paintings - 69x79 cm
    Cottongrass (Langanes, Iceland) by Tommy Kwak

    Cottongrass (Langanes, Iceland)

    Photography - 76x102 cm
    DOUBLE DUTCH by db Waterman

    DOUBLE DUTCH

    Paintings - 120x80 cm
    The Quiet Time by Lisa Kellner

    The Quiet Time

    Paintings - 76x122 cm
    Solitude by Lisa Kellner

    Solitude

    Paintings - 102x102 cm
    SUMMIT by Dave Smith

    SUMMIT

    Paintings - 92x122 cm
    Mountainscape No. 3 by Elizabeth Becker

    Mountainscape No. 3

    Paintings - 65x91 cm
    Spring Greens II by Olivia Rose Durley

    Spring Greens II

    Paintings - 76x76 cmRent for $95 /mo

    Chronopolis

    Paintings - 60x120 cmRent for $230 /mo

    FOREST

    Paintings - 101x101 cmRent for $160 /mo

    Suspension (upcoming)

    Paintings - 102x102 cm

    “10062022 offline II.”

    Paintings - 125x115 cm

    El Paisaje Perturbado

    Photography - 102x152 cmRent for $115 /mo

    Wander

    Paintings - 88x138 cmRent for $150 /mo

    Canyon

    Paintings - 90x90 cm

    Waterfall

    Paintings - 51x41 cm

    Once was home

    Photography - 50x50 cm

    Jeudi 9

    Paintings - 24x24 cm

    neosho

    Paintings - 80x60 cmRent for $105 /mo

    Suspension (east sky) no.9

    Paintings - 91x127 cm

    Carlyon Sunshine

    Prints - 84x79 cm

    The Ocean

    Paintings - 91x91 cm

    MOUNTAIN VIEWS

    Paintings - 122x122 cm

    Atlántico - 9433.

    Photography - 110x160 cm

    Becoming

    Paintings - 80x80 cm

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