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The Hunt in the Forest

Paolo Uccello

Paolo Uccello, born Paolo di Dono, was an Italian painter and mathematician who was notable for his pioneering work on visual perspective in art.

Max Resolution:4096×1575 PX

Title:The Hunt in the Forest

Artists:Paolo Uccello

Date:c.1460

Style:Early Renaissance

Genre:genre painting

Medium:oil,panel

Location:Ashmolean Museum, Oxford, UK

Dimensions:177×73.5 cm

Copyright:Public domain

The Hunt in the Forest (also known as The Hunt by Night or simply The Hunt) is a painting by the Italian artist Paolo Uccello, made around 1470. It is perhaps the best-known painting in the Ashmolean Museum, Oxford, England.

The painting is an early example of the effective use of perspective in Renaissance art, with the hunt participants, including people, horses, dogs and deer, disappearing into the dark forest in the distance. It was Uccello's last known painting before his death in 1475.

The painting is featured in the "Point of Vanishing" episode of the British TV series Lewis. A postcard of the painting is discovered as a clue to a murder. Lewis and his colleague visit the painting at the Ashmolean Museum on more than one occasion and are instructed on its significant features by a museum expert. The painting provides Lewis with an insight that allows him to solve the case.

John Fowles mentions the painting twice: in The Ebony Tower and "The Collector,"...the design hits you the moment you see it. Apart from all the other technical things. You know it's faultless."