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Image of 'A View of Het Steen in the Early Morning', probably 1636 by Peter Paul Rubens. The National Gallery, London.
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Teachers' Notes

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'An Autumn Landscape with a View of Het Steen in the Early Morning', 1636
by Peter Paul Rubens
London, The National Gallery.

For 2006/07, the one-day Continuing Professional Development courses, called 'Take One Picture', run by National Gallery Education, focused on 'An Autumn Landscape with a View of Het Steen in the Early Morning', by Peter Paul Rubens.

The course looked at ways of using paintings in the classroom as a starting point for delivering many areas of the National Curriculum. This principle aligns closely with the DfES Primary National Strategy: Excellence and Enjoyment, which supports a holistic approach to the curriculum by exploiting the links between subject areas.

This large landscape shows a view of Het Steen ('stone house'), which was the home of the artist Rubens. He painted it for himself. He was in semi-retirement by the time he bought Het Steen and had earned enough money from his successful career as an artist to have the luxury of being able to paint for pleasure.

Rubens's painting is full of clues as to the time of day and the season it depicts. The colour of the countryside foliage and the flowering plants, such as blackberry and chrysanthemum, in the foreground indicate that this is an autumn scene. Meanwhile, the position of the sun in relation to the view, looking north towards the town of Malines on the horizon, show it rising in the east, meaning it must be morning. Various activities carried out by people in the painting also suggest it is early in the day, such as the group of women milking cows in the distant field, and the couple on a horse-drawn carriage laden with barrels and goods, perhaps on their way to market.

Click here to view work from the 2008 exhibition, inspired by this painting.

© The National Gallery, London

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