The National Gallery has in recent years made a speciality of examining the hitherto unexamined. Just for starters, a surprise hit some years ago was Spanish Still Lifes, 2007 saw Renoir Landscapes (who knew?), last year there was the ravishing Christen Kobke, star of the Danish Golden Age, and just this spring New York’s Ashcan School, all with committed scholarship throwing light on the internationally disregarded.
In a gallery full of stormy seas, Alpine passes (with the occasional mountain goat), fast-moving streams and huge skies, two more unfamiliar geographies are on view. We may suspect that Switzerland is home to more than centuries of worthy stability and the cuckoo clock, and Norway, after centuries of occupation by her neighbours, more than Nordic commonsense, Northern Lights and all that oil; but hands up whoever can name the outstanding 19th-century painters of Alpine and fjord landscapes that inhabit the museums of Oslo and Wintherthur?
Johann Christian Dahl probably does just make it, but Johann Gottfried Steffan? Peder Balke? Francois Diday? Adam-Wolfgang Toppfer? Knud Baade? Even the most substantial of all, Alexandre Calame? They're all here making their presence known, mostly for the first time in London.
In this selection from the specialist collection of New York-based Norwegian-American lawyer Asbjorn Lunde, we are shown a romantically inclined, occasionally picturesque and often sublime response to land and seascape. A familiar 19th-century point of view is here brushed in by almost completely unfamiliar artists. Jean Jacques Rousseau’s 18th-century rhapsodic commentary on nature is a philosophic bedrock: “Imagine the variety, the grandeur, the beauty of a thousand stunning vistas; the pleasure of seeing all around you… an altogether different nature, and finding oneself in a new world.”
The combination of Switzerland and Norway throws up surprising similarities in spite of contradictory geographies. Yes, Switzerland is landlocked but awash with lakes and rivers - Lake Lucerne is here a star, Calame admiring its blue, green and turquoise waters from its coastal cliffs (main picture above: Cliffs of Seelisberg, Lake Lucerne, c 1861) - and Norway provides as much coastline as glacier and mountain pass.


A rediscovery is Peder Balke, a Norwegian born into rural poverty who achieved a peripatetic career. Balke studied in Oslo, Stockholm and Dresden, walked the Norwegian landscape, received a royal commission in Paris and eventually painted for himself in relative but prosperous obscurity. His brilliantly wilful seascapes in tones of black, white and grey are sombre in mood, intimately grand and beguilingly lively in execution.

This anthology is certainly a good place to cool down if the sun ever comes out in our monsoon summer; but the overall impact is perhaps a little tame. These major minor masters are patriotically wedded to the beauties and grandeurs of their native landscapes, but their imaginations are at times just too firmly grounded.
- Forests, Rocks, Torrents: Norwegian and Swss Landscapes from the Lunde Collection at the National Gallery until 18 September
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