| Jakob Philipp Hackert (1737–1807)
regarded landscapes as natural events, and his precisely observed
depictions of geological and atmospheric phenomena marked a turning
point in 18th-century landscape painting. For the first time, a comprehensive
exhibition of Hackert’s work is being presented at the Hamburger
Kunsthalle in cooperation with the Klassik Stiftung Weimar (Foundation
of Weimar Classics).
Despite being famous during his own lifetime and held in high regard
by Goethe, Hackert is one of the artists from the period around 1800
who was later largely forgotten, and it is only recently that his
work has attracted renewed interest. Following his training in Berlin
and stays in Sweden and France, he spent the greater part of his
life working in Italy. Here he established his reputation as an internationally
acclaimed artist and contributed greatly to shaping the image of
Italy before 1800. Besides veduta, harbour views and hunting scenes,
Hackert above all painted atmospheric landscapes in the Roman Campagna,
Tuscany and parts of Southern Italy such as Naples and Sicily.
The world in which Hackert lived was still strongly influenced
by the feudalistic splendour of the Ancien Régime, which was
swept aside when French revolutionary troops invaded Naples. At the
same time, however, he was already an extremely efficient, market-orientated
and business-minded artist who was able to operate largely independently
of hierarchical court structures, and as such he anticipated modern
artistic positions of the 19th century. While Hackert’s landscapes – ideal
compositions augmented with historicising staffage or ancient sites – make
him an important forerunner and representative of the classical conception
of art, he also breached the established criteria of this rigorously
idealised vision of art with his topographically accurate set pieces
and precise rendering of carefully observed natural details.
In this way Hackert also provided a starting point for the next
generation of artists. His interest in natural phenomena, in the
depiction of waterfalls, volcanic eruptions or mountain gorges – combining
landscape painting with the natural sciences through the detailed
study of geological and atmospheric phenomena – found logical
continuation in the work of various other artists. Around 70 paintings
and 70 works on paper, on loan from collections throughout Europe,
will give a representative overview of Hackert’s diverse œ uvre.
Exhibition curator: Dr. Andreas Stolzenburg
Supported by


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Jakob Philipp Hackert (1737-1807)The Waterfalls
of Tivoli, 1785© Hamburger Kunsthalle / bpkPhoto: Elke Walford

Jakob Philipp Hackert (1737-1807)
Blick auf den Ätna, 1783
© München, Privatsammlung

Jakob Philipp Hackert (1737-1807)
Die Ruine des Olympeions in Agrigent, 1778
© Leipzig, Museum der Bildenden Künste, Graphische Sammlung

Jakob Philipp Hackert (1737-1807)
Venustempel in Baie, 1798
© Staatliche Museen zu Berlin, Alte Nationalgalerie

Jakob Philipp Hackert (1737-1807)
Die Küste bei Vietri, 1770
© Hamburger Kunsthalle,
Kupferstichkabinett
Photo: Elke Walford
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