Nature photographs by famous photographers. Landscape photography - notes from a practicing landscape painter. Planning software must be used

I invite you to meet the best contemporary photographers. Read the review, share it with your friends and get inspired while admiring the works of masters of the landscape genre!
Dmitry Arkhipov

A native Muscovite, Dmitry Arkhipov has been interested in photography since childhood. A physicist by training, Dmitry served in the army, worked at the Space Research Institute under the Buran program, created his own well-known IT company, while simultaneously continuing to improve in the field of landscape photography.
The results of his travels to 108 countries around the world were five personal exhibitions, where Dmitry’s works were seen by more than a million people. Now Dmitry Arkhipov is a titled photographer, a member of the Russian Union of Photographers, winner and laureate of national and international photo competitions.
Denis Budkov


Denis Budkov is a native of Kamchatka; since 1995 he has been traveling and photographing his native land. The love for nature and the desire to show all its beauty became the motivation for studying the basics of photography and improving skills in practice. Denis's main passion is volcanoes, with which the nature of Kamchatka is so rich. The volcanic eruptions and peaceful Kamchatka landscapes he captured have already received awards from the prestigious photo competitions Best of Russia 2009, 2013, Wildlife of Russia 2011, 2013, Golden Turtle, Wildlife Photographer of the Year - 2011. Denis says that photography for him is a way of life, which is completely satisfactory. The main thing is to wait for the right moment to take that very shot.
Mikhail Vershinin


Mikhail Vershinin became interested in photography as a child; he had to give up visiting the photo studio in favor of another hobby - rock climbing and mountaineering, but even on sports routes he took his camera with him. The craving for traveling in wild places and the passion for filming eventually led Mikhail Vershinin to landscape photography. He explains his choice of this particular genre not only by a craving for nature, but also by a special mood, the ability to convey feelings and emotions with the help of a captured moment. Mikhail Vershinin's works have repeatedly become finalists and winners of Russian and international competitions, including " National Geographic Russia - 2004" and FIAP Trierenberg Super Circuit - 2011 in the "Night Image" nomination.
Oleg Gaponyuk


Oleg Gaponyuk, a MIPT graduate, lives and works in Moscow and has an unusual hobby - panoramic photography. For the sake of nice photo he can easily go to the other end of the earth, simultaneously practicing alpine skiing, windsurfing and diving. Despite the fact that his sporting hobbies are associated with mountains, seas and oceans, in the field of photography Oleg became interested in creating spherical panoramas in the air. He is actively involved in the AirPano.ru project, within the framework of which more than 1,500 bird's-eye panoramas have already been taken in the most interesting cities and corners of the world. In terms of the geography of filming, the number of aerial panoramas and the artistic value of the material, this project is one of the world leaders in this type of panoramic photography.
Daniil Korzhonov


MIPT graduate Daniil Korzhonov prefers to call himself an amateur photographer, because he simply does what he likes. Photography allowed him to combine his passion for painting and his love of travel. As a landscape photographer, he visits the most beautiful places on the globe and “paints” what he sees on film. Combining photography with travel allows Daniil to lead an active lifestyle and express his thoughts and feelings with the help of beautiful and original shots taken both in wild places and on city streets. He advises all novice photographers to shoot as much and as often as possible in order to better understand the beauty of the world around them.
Vladimir Medvedev


Vladimir Medvedev - founder of the Photographers Club wildlife, tireless traveler, professional photographer, winner of international competitions, including the BBC Wildlife Photography Competition in 2012 in the Eric Hosking Portfolio Award. Collaboration with wildlife reserves around the world allows Vladimir to take unique photographs of the pristine world and its inhabitants. According to Vladimir Medvedev, photography is both an art, a means of understanding the world, and a means of influencing the world. It's easy to start taking photographs - you just need to buy a camera and learn from the best.
Yuri Pustovoy


Yuri Pustovoy is a graduate of VGIK, a cinematographer at the Odessa Film Studio with ten years of experience and an honored travel photographer. His works have received recognition from the jury and visitors of international exhibitions and photo competitions, including Yuri's Gold Medal of the International Federation of Photographic Arts FIAP Global Arctic Awards 2012. Yuri Pustovoy is not only a traveler and photographer, but also an organizer of photo tours for real amateur photographers and beginners. Yuri and his team's cameras capture landscapes from different parts of the planet. During the tour, Yuri shares his photographic experience, helps during filming with advice and action, and teaches techniques for processing photographs in graphic editors.
Sergey Semenov


Sergey Semyonov became interested in photography in 2003, when he came into his hands for the first time in his life digital camera. Since then, he has not only devoted his entire life to this hobby free time, but also turned photography into a profession, exchanging the career of an economist for the fate of a travel photographer. In pursuit of the most beautiful views of the earth, Sergei visits National parks North America, the mountains of Patagonia, the icy lagoons of Iceland, the Brazilian jungle and hot deserts. He takes pictures of his favorite landscapes from a bird's eye view and is an active participant in the AirPano.ru project. In his first panorama, Sergei showed the Kremlin as birds see it.
Vlad Sokolovsky


Belarusian photographer Vlad Sokolovsky is known as a master of the landscape genre. Like many of his colleagues, he believes that beauty is present everywhere, and the skill of a photographer lies in showing it to the viewer. He is characterized by being demanding of himself and the quality of his work. You will be surprised, but sometimes Vlad comes to the same place several times to achieve the right lighting and take a great shot. Also, Vlad has been reading our magazine for a long time and regularly shares his photographs with our entire audience.
Alexey Suloev


Alexey Suloev received his first camera at the age of seven and quickly got used to photographing everything around him, especially since his passion for tourism allowed him to find himself in the most unusual, unexplored places of the Caucasus, Pamir and Tien Shan. Gradually, tourist trips turned into real photo trips. In pursuit of unusual shots, Alexey has already visited more than a hundred countries; the geography of his trips includes the most inaccessible and untouched places on our planet, from the North to the South Pole. Alexey takes pictures because he cannot describe in words the beauty and diversity of the earth. He generously shares everything he sees with his viewers, so that every person can find creative inspiration in the inexhaustibility of nature.
Kirill Uyutnov


Kirill Uyutnov is a geologist and nature photographer. At the age of 11, he began studying paleontology and going on expeditions; later he graduated from the Geological Prospecting University, after which he became interested in photography on business trips. He traveled to the northern and Far Eastern regions of Russia (Yakutia, Chukotka, Evenkia, Kamchatka, Kolyma) and other countries (Guinea, Morocco, Turkey, Belgium) with landscape and reportage photography. Finalist of many photo competitions, active traveler!
Leonid Halfen


Muscovite Leonid Halfen has been photographing for more than thirty-five years, ever since he first picked up a camera at eleven. He says to himself: “I am one of those who still remembers that Industar is not an Indian satellite.” Even now, Leonid uses not only modern digital photographic equipment, but also good old film cameras. His passion for photography and travel led him to travel to almost all continents over the course of two decades. The unique photographs taken along the way are a visible and beautiful evidence of his wanderings.
Igor Shpilenok


Igor Shpilenok is a famous animal photographer, popular blogger and wildlife defender. His photographs are not only a way to show the beauty of the world, but also an opportunity to draw attention to environmental activities, primarily in Russia. Igor actively works in nature reserves (in the Bryansk Forest and the Kronotsky Nature Reserve in Kamchatka), travels a lot, takes photographs and publishes books, showing wild nature as it exists without human intervention. His reports about the lives of foxes and bears, gophers and hares, about births and deaths will not leave anyone indifferent. The beauty of a photo is not an end in itself, but a tool with which Igor Shpilenok protects wildlife.
Alexey Ebel


Alexey Ebel is a professional biologist, a real ornithologist and photographer, organizer and participant of photo competitions and photo exhibitions “Wildlife of Altai” and “Charm of Altai”. For most of the year, Alexey lives in Barnaul, and for the rest of the year he lies in the most beautiful places of the Altai Mountains with binoculars or a camera in his hands and watches birds. Alexey not only captures the beautiful nature and feathered population of this region, but also writes in scientific journals articles summarizing the results of his field work. Anyone can join his expeditions to study nature and simply enjoy an intense outdoor recreation and photography.

We continue to introduce our readers to the best contemporary photographers. Today we’ll talk about the landscape genre. So, read our review, share it with your friends and get inspired by admiring the works of masters of the landscape genre!

Dmitry Arkhipov

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A native Muscovite, Dmitry Arkhipov has been interested in photography since childhood. A physicist by training, Dmitry served in the army, worked at the Space Research Institute under the Buran program, created his own well-known IT company, while simultaneously continuing to improve in the field of landscape photography.

The results of his travels to 108 countries around the world were five personal exhibitions, where Dmitry’s works were seen by more than a million people. Now Dmitry Arkhipov is a titled photographer, a member of the Russian Union of Photographers, winner and laureate of national and international photo competitions.

Denis Budkov

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Denis Budkov is a native of Kamchatka; since 1995 he has been traveling and photographing his native land. The love for nature and the desire to show all its beauty became the motivation for studying the basics of photography and improving skills in practice. Denis’s main passion is volcanoes, which the nature of Kamchatka is so rich in. The volcanic eruptions and peaceful Kamchatka landscapes he captured have already received awards from the prestigious photo competitions Best of Russia 2009, 2013, Wildlife of Russia 2011, 2013, Golden Turtle, Wildlife Photographer of the Year - 2011. Denis says that photography for him is a way of life, which is completely satisfactory. The main thing is to wait for the right moment to take that very shot.

Mikhail Vershinin

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Mikhail Vershinin became interested in photography as a child; he had to give up visiting the photo studio in favor of another hobby - rock climbing and mountaineering, but even on sports routes he took his camera with him. The craving for traveling in wild places and the passion for filming eventually led Mikhail Vershinin to landscape photography. He explains his choice of this particular genre not only by a craving for nature, but also by a special mood, the ability to convey feelings and emotions with the help of a captured moment. Mikhail Vershinin’s works have repeatedly become finalists and winners of Russian and international competitions, including National Geographic Russia - 2004 and FIAP Trierenberg Super Circuit - 2011 in the Night Image category.

Oleg Gaponyuk

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Oleg Gaponyuk, a MIPT graduate, lives and works in Moscow and has an unusual hobby - panoramic photography. For the sake of a good photo, he can easily go to the other end of the earth, while doing alpine skiing, windsurfing and diving. Despite the fact that his sporting hobbies are related to mountains, seas and oceans, in the field of photography Oleg became interested in creating spherical panoramas in the air. He is actively involved in the AirPano.ru project, within the framework of which more than 1,500 bird's-eye panoramas have already been taken in the most interesting cities and corners of the world. In terms of the geography of filming, the number of aerial panoramas and the artistic value of the material, this project is one of the world leaders in this type of panoramic photography.

Daniil Korzhonov

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MIPT graduate Daniil Korzhonov prefers to call himself an amateur photographer, because he simply does what he likes. Photography allowed him to combine his passion for painting and his love of travel. As a landscape photographer, he visits the most beautiful places on the globe and “paints” what he sees on film. Combining photography with travel allows Daniil to lead an active lifestyle and express his thoughts and feelings with the help of beautiful and original shots taken both in wild places and on city streets. He advises all novice photographers to shoot as much and as often as possible in order to better understand the beauty of the world around them.

Vladimir Medvedev

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Vladimir Medvedev is the founder of the Wildlife Photographers Club, a tireless traveler, professional photographer, winner of international competitions, including the BBC Wildlife Photography Competition in 2012 in the Eric Hosking Portfolio Award category. Collaboration with wildlife reserves around the world allows Vladimir to take unique photographs of the pristine world and its inhabitants. According to Vladimir Medvedev, photography is both an art, a means of understanding the world, and a means of influencing the world. It's easy to start taking photographs - you just need to buy a camera and learn from the best.

Yuri Pustovoy

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Yuri Pustovoy is a graduate of VGIK, a cinematographer at the Odessa Film Studio with ten years of experience and an honored travel photographer. His works have received recognition from the jury and visitors of international exhibitions and photo competitions, including Yuri's Gold Medal of the International Federation of Photographic Arts FIAP Global Arctic Awards 2012. Yuri Pustovoy is not only a traveler and photographer, but also an organizer of photo tours for real amateur photographers and beginners. Yuri and his team's cameras capture landscapes from different parts of the planet. During the tour, Yuri shares his photographic experience, helps during filming with advice and action, and teaches techniques for processing photographs in graphic editors.

Sergey Semenov

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Sergey Semenov became interested in photography in 2003, when he got his hands on a digital camera for the first time in his life. Since then, he not only devoted all his free time to this hobby, but also turned photography into a profession, exchanging his career as an economist for the fate of a travel photographer. In pursuit of the most beautiful views of the earth, Sergei visits the national parks of North America, the mountains of Patagonia, the icy lagoons of Iceland, the Brazilian jungle and hot deserts. He takes pictures of his favorite landscapes from a bird's eye view and is an active participant in the AirPano.ru project. In his first panorama, Sergei showed the Kremlin as birds see it.

Vlad Sokolovsky

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Belarusian photographer Vlad Sokolovsky is known as a master of the landscape genre. Like many of his colleagues, he believes that beauty is present everywhere, and the skill of a photographer lies in showing it to the viewer. He is characterized by being demanding of himself and the quality of his work. You will be surprised, but sometimes Vlad comes to the same place several times to achieve the right lighting and take a great shot. Also, Vlad has been reading our magazine for a long time and regularly shares his photographs with our entire audience.

Alexey Suloev

Website

Alexey Suloev received his first camera at the age of seven and quickly got used to photographing everything around him, especially since his passion for tourism allowed him to find himself in the most unusual, unexplored places of the Caucasus, Pamir and Tien Shan. Gradually, tourist trips turned into real photo trips. In pursuit of unusual shots, Alexey has already visited more than a hundred countries; the geography of his trips includes the most inaccessible and untouched places on our planet, from the North to the South Pole. Alexey takes pictures because he cannot describe in words the beauty and diversity of the earth. He generously shares everything he sees with his viewers, so that every person can find creative inspiration in the inexhaustibility of nature.

The best photographers, according to the editors, are able to capture a moment in such a way that you want to watch it again and again. The photographs are striking and impressive, forcing us to open our eyes to what we do not notice in Everyday life. Beauty is all around us, and photographers prove it time after time.

Losko Magazine has collected 10 bright projects, where best photographers demonstrate their vision. Industrial landscapes and breathtaking views, strict geometry and abstract minimalism - everything is here. The pictures are different, but there is something that unites them - the aesthetic pleasure that you get when viewing them.

1. Salt mining sites in surreal photos by Emma Phillips

2. Geometric world photographed by Lino Russo

Lino Russo (eng. Lino Russo) is not only a crazy method of weaving a long braid, but also the name of a graphic designer from Italy. Growing up in the bay of the Bay of Naples, Lino spent hours looking at the sky and dreaming until the word appeared in his head. The series of photographic images of the same name is breathtaking with a curious fusion of the sky and geometric metrics.

The artist’s series is dominated by minimalistically polished photographs: simple elements and clean lines, harmony and symbiosis of natural and industrial, carefully thought out compositions and structures, decisive contrasts of the infinitely blue sky and the diversity of Italian architecture.

The places caught in the artist’s lens have several things in common: they are schematic, pursue perfect symmetry and dabble in the square as best they can. Lino sought to present a grand escape from the intended context of architectural spaces, inviting viewers to explore multiple modes of fresh interpretation.

3. Industrial landscape: the song of concrete and steel in the Sites project

Sammer's Kai (eng. Kai Caemmerer) - photographer with a BFA, living in Chicago, USA. In the project, he draws attention to how the developing industrial landscape of cities is eclipsing nature.

The photographs show that structures made of steel and concrete truly dominate the area and fill all available space. Nature modestly and obediently gives way to its place.

Gigantic, vast structures “look” somewhat arrogantly at the person who builds and maintains them.

4. Photographs of architecture from German photographer Kilian Schönberger

Colorblindness is not yet a reason to give up the desire to become professional photographer and create wonderful photographs of architecture. With his example, the German Kilian Schönberger proved that this vice can be turned into your own. strong point. He simply stopped paying attention to the shades of green and brown and focused on the texture of the photograph, thereby developing his own approach to processing frames.

Kilian recently filmed architectural project in the city of Heuss. It is a museum located on an area of ​​62 acres. From 1982 to 1994, sculptor Erwin Gerich built 11 museum pavilions on this land, which he himself calls “chapels.” Every photo of this place attracts with its architectural harmony and geometry of style.

5. Living green fences in the photo of Alexandra Davy

Living green fences are amazing and harmonious. “Plants are part of nature, and walls are part of culture, which provide us with imaginary protection from prying eyes. Inside, they hide what a person is trying to hide from the outside world, but presents it in a different form,” these words formed the basis of the idea of ​​the photo project “,” the author of which is a pretty girl from France with the majestic name of Alexandra.

In her photographs Alexandra Davy (eng. Alexandra Davy) wants to convey the strange habit of people to close themselves off and hide. It's as if everyone wants to build their own monolithic stone wall, even if there are only simple hedges at hand. This changes the natural environment, turning beautiful plants into stone blocks.

Post-Soviet architecture forms a unique landscape of the city, and in the photographs of British photographer Roman Sakovich (eng. Roman Sakovich) looks especially atmospheric and truly unique, despite the fact that these are “ordinary” city places.

The abundance of light and the purity of each frame is what mainly determines the photographer's style. In addition, the script for each shoot is carefully thought out, so the result is often stunning.

7. Breathtaking views from Finn Beals

If you like breathtaking views, you'll love the work of Finn Beals Finn Beales. His photos are quite popular among users Instagram. And for good reason: he manages to do truly amazing things, only the best photographers are capable of this. Just look at these photos and before you know it, you’ll start packing your backpack for a camping trip.

Finn doesn't just shoot for himself. His photographs are commissioned and used by many international brands.

Them, like ordinary people, attracts the cinematography and thoughtfulness of the compositions. Behind every frame lies a whole story. And this only fuels curiosity, inspires and fascinates.

8. David Berdeni - St. Petersburg and Moscow metro stations at night

Would you like to see what events the metro stations witness at night? This opportunity presented itself to Canadian architect and photographer David Berdeni (eng. David Burdeny), who created a series called, telling about the amazing underground architecture of Moscow and St. Petersburg.

To obtain permission to photograph at night, the photographer had to wait almost a year. But the effort was worth it, and the opportunity provided would be the envy of the best photographers in the world. For two weeks, David filmed on empty station platforms, enjoying the beauty of the interior decoration of Stalin-era buildings.

In St. Petersburg, David visited the Hermitage and also went to Pushkin and Peterhof. The photographer managed to convey the atmosphere of luxury in deserted halls with their museum caretakers, which, according to the author of the series, are a reminder of the achievements of Russian culture.

9. Mental space of the environment according to Benoit Payet

Mental space is subtle matter. His research was carried out by Benoit Payet, an experimental artist from Quebec, looking for his personal definition in all established genres of photography. He classifies his works as “hyper-realistic” painting.

The "" series digitizes mental spaces, trying to talk about humanity without directly showing people. Benoit creates an emotional portrait of himself and enters into a symbolic dialogue with his environment, with past beliefs and prejudices, reinventing himself and constructing his manifesto of reality.

“When my eye, like a camera, focuses on an object, all the anxious thoughts that previously terrorized my head suddenly disappear. In my episode, I made an attempt to give the audience a sense of that feeling.”

10. Amazing architecture as an object of interest for Matthias Heydrich

Matthias Heydrich is a 29-year-old photographer from Bad Hersfeld who is attracted by the amazing, graphic design and urban landscape. He is a fan of Josef Schulz, Tim Hecker, drone ambient, vinyl covers and playing with light. His works are a real photographic trip into the world of beautiful forms and structures. He enjoys exploring the complexities of color in minimalist architecture, following his unique and highly distinctive style and bringing to the world an unexplored side of the familiar city of Berlin.

When Matthias goes for a walk, his gaze is constantly in search of patterns, lines, colors and various urban abstractions in order to turn all this assortment into something new, to take them out of the general context. “If I had to choose one place to film on Earth, I would choose the industrial areas of the former Soviet countries. These places are full of amazing and strange architecture."

Published: March 26, 2018

This list of famous landscape painters was compiled by our editor Neil Collins, MFA, LL.B. It represents his personal opinion of the ten best representatives of genre art. Like any such compilation, it reveals more about the personal tastes of the compiler than about the place of landscape painters. So, the top ten landscape painters and their landscapes.

http://www.visual-arts-cork.com/best-landscape-artists.htm

No. 10 Thomas Cole (1801-1848) and Frederic Edwin Church (1826-1900)

There are two American artists in tenth place.

Thomas Cole: The greatest American landscape painter of the early 19th century and founder of the Hudson River School, Thomas Cole was born in England, where he worked as an apprentice engraver before emigrating to the United States in 1818, where he quickly achieved recognition as a landscape painter, settling in the Catskill village of the Hudson Valley. An admirer of Claude Lorraine and Turner, he visited England and Italy from 1829 to 1832, after which (thanks in part to the encouragement he received from John Martyn and Turner) he began to focus less on natural landscapes and more on grand allegorical and historical themes. . Largely impressed by the natural beauty of the American landscape, Cole imbued much of his landscape art with great feeling and an obvious romantic splendor.

Famous landscapes of Thomas Cole:

- “View of the Catskills - Early Autumn” (1837), oil on canvas, Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York

- “American Lake” (1844), oil on canvas, Detroit Institute of Arts

Frederic Edwin Church

- “Niagara Falls” (1857), Corcoran, Washington

- “The Heart of the Andes” (1859), Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York

- "Cotopaxi" (1862), Detroit Institute of Arts

No. 9 Caspar David Friedrich (1774-1840)

Thoughtful, melancholy and a bit of a recluse, Caspar David Friedrich is the greatest landscape painter of the Romantic tradition. Born near the Baltic Sea, he settled in Dresden, where he focused exclusively on spiritual connections and the meaning of landscape, inspired by the silent silence of the forest, as well as light (sunrise, sunset, moonlight) and the seasons. His genius lay in his ability to capture a hitherto unknown spiritual dimension in nature, which gives the landscape an emotional, never-before-matched mysticism.

Famous landscapes of Caspar David Friedrich:

- “Winter Landscape” (1811), oil on canvas, National Gallery, London

- “Landscape in Riesengebirge” (1830), oil on canvas, Pushkin Museum, Moscow

- “Man and Woman Looking at the Moon” (1830-1835), oil, National Gallery, Berlin

No. 8 Alfred Sisley (1839-1899)

Often called the “forgotten impressionist,” the Anglo-French Alfred Sisley was second only to Monet in his devotion to spontaneous plein airism: he was the only Impressionist to devote himself exclusively to landscape painting. His seriously underrated reputation rests on his ability to capture the unique effects of light and the seasons in sweeping landscapes and sea and river scenes. His image of dawn and an unclear day is especially memorable. Nowadays he is not very popular, but is still considered one of the greatest representatives of impressionist landscape painting. Might well be overrated since, unlike Monet, his work never suffered from a lack of form.

Famous landscapes of Alfred Sisley:

- “Foggy Morning” (1874), oil on canvas, Orsay Museum

- “Snow at Louveciennes” (1878), oil on canvas, Orsay Museum, Paris

- “Morette Bridge in the Sun” (1892), oil on canvas, private collection

No. 7 Albert Cuyp (1620-1691)

Dutch realist painter, Aelbert Kuip is one of the most famous Dutch landscape painters. His magnificent scenic views, river scenes and landscapes of calm cattle, show a majestic serenity and a masterful handling of bright light (early morning or evening sun) in the Italian style is a sign of Klodeev's great influence. This golden light often catches only the sides and edges of plants, clouds or animals through impasto lighting effects. Thus, Cuyp turned his native Dordrecht into an imaginary world, reflecting it at the beginning or end of an ideal day, with an all-encompassing sense of stillness and security, and the harmony of everything with nature. Popular in Holland, it was highly prized and collected in England.

Famous landscapes of Albert Cuyp:

- “View of Dordrecht from the North” (1650), oil on canvas, collection of Anthony de Rothschild

- “River Landscape with Horseman and Peasants” (1658), oil, National Gallery, London

No. 6 Jean-Baptiste Camille Corot (1796-1875)

Jean-Baptiste Corot, one of the greatest landscape painters of the Romantic style, is famous for his unforgettable picturesque depictions of nature. His particularly subtle approach to distance, light and form depended on tone rather than drawing and color, giving the finished composition the atmosphere of an endless romance. Less constrained by pictorial theory, Korot's work nevertheless ranks among the world's most popular landscapes. A regular participant in the Paris Salon since 1827 and a member of the Barbizon School led by Théodore Rousseau (1812-1867), he had a huge influence on other plein air artists such as Charles-François Daubigny (1817-1878), Camille Pissarro (1830-1903). ) and Alfred Sisley (1839-1899). He was also an extraordinarily generous man who spent much of his money on artists in need.

Famous landscapes of Jean-Baptiste Corot:

- “Bridge at Narni” (1826), oil on canvas, Louvre

- “Ville d'Avrey” (ca. 1867), oil on canvas, Brooklyn Museum of Art, New York

- “Rural Landscape” (1875), oil on canvas, Toulouse-Lautrec Museum, Albi, France

No. 5 Jacob van Ruisdael (1628-1682)

- “Mill in Wijk near Duarsted” (1670), oil on canvas, Rijksmuseum

- “Jewish cemetery in Ouderkerk” (1670), Gallery of Old Masters, Dresden

No. 4 Claude Lorrain (1600-1682)

French painter, draughtsman and engraver, active in Rome, who is considered by many art historians to be the greatest painter of the idyllic landscape in the history of art. Since pure (that is, secular and non-classical) landscape, like ordinary still life or genre painting, lacked moral gravity (in 17th century Rome), Claude Lorrain introduced classical elements and mythological themes into his compositions, including gods, heroes and saints. Moreover, his chosen environment, countryside around Rome, was rich in ancient ruins. These classic Italian pastoral landscapes were also imbued with a poetic light that represents his unique contribution to the art of landscape painting. Claude Lorraine particularly influenced English artists, both during his lifetime and for two centuries after it: John Constable called him "the finest landscape painter the world has ever seen."

Famous landscapes of Claude Lorrain:

- “Modern Rome - Campo Vaccino” (1636), oil on canvas, Louvre

- “Landscape with the Wedding of Isaac and Rebecca” (1648), oil, National Gallery

- “Landscape with Tobias and the Angel” (1663), oil, Hermitage, St. Petersburg

- "Building a Boat at Flatward" (1815), oil, Victoria and Albert Museum, London

- “Hay Wagon” (1821), oil on canvas, National Gallery, London

No. 2 Claude Monet (1840-1926)

The greatest modern landscape painter and a giant of French painting, Monet was a leading figure in the incredibly influential Impressionist movement, whose principles of spontaneous plein air painting he remained faithful to for the rest of his life. A close friend of the Impressionist artists Renoir and Pissarro, his pursuit of optical truth, primarily in the depiction of light, is represented by a series of canvases depicting the same object in different lighting conditions, and at different times of day, such as Haystacks (1888). ), Poplars (1891), Rouen Cathedral (1892) and The River Thames (1899). This method culminated in the famous Water Lilies series (among all the most famous landscapes), created from 1883 in his garden at Giverny. His final series of monumental drawings of water lilies with shimmering flowers have been interpreted by several art historians and painters as an important precursor to abstract art, and by others as the supreme example of Monet's search for spontaneous naturalism.

After viewing these majestic landscapes, you might be itching to visit the UK. It's not surprising, because it's -best works British photographers who capture and impress.

The Landscape Photographer of the Year competition was founded in 2007 by renowned British photographer Charlie Waite. Every year, the competition jury selects the best landscape photographs from thousands of applicants. By tradition, the most memorable photographs end up in a special album, and the winner of the competition receives a check for 10,000 pounds (856 thousand rubles). Here are the works that won prizes in the 2018 photo competition.

Pete Rowbottom won Landscape Photographer of the Year 2018. The photograph "Ice Spikes" was taken in the Glencoe Valley, Scotland.

The Adobe Prize went to Will Milner for his photograph of the lighthouse in Brixham, Devon, UK

"The Lighthouse and the Sea Serpent" by Edward Hyde. The photo was taken in New Haven Harbor during Storm Brian in October 2017. Wind speed reached 64 km/h

"The Train at Cardigan Bay" by Paul Fowles

James Loveridge lived in Dorset for 27 years, but only saw fog flowing from a cliff to the coast once.

Mary Davey captured this beauty at sunrise in Houghton, West Sussex

Spring in a Warwickshire forest through the lens of Chris Fletcher

“Kilt Rock Falls on a Cloudy Day” by Pavel Zygmunt

 

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