{"id":5277,"date":"2024-05-21T13:48:00","date_gmt":"2024-05-21T11:48:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/?p=5277"},"modified":"2024-06-21T10:57:43","modified_gmt":"2024-06-21T08:57:43","slug":"koens-forsvinden-landbrug-og-liv-i-smks-landskabsmalerier","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/en\/koens-forsvinden-landbrug-og-liv-i-smks-landskabsmalerier\/","title":{"rendered":"Cows Looking Back <br> Agriculture and Life in 19th Century Landscape Paintings"},"content":{"rendered":"<p>The cow is one of our oldest allies in the landscape.<sup id=\"footnote-1\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"1\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_5277\" data-sup-value=\"This article is part of my research project \u2018Landbrug og landskab \u2013 SMK\u2019s landskabsmalerier i et klimakritisk nu\u2019 (Agriculture and Landscape \u2013 SMK\u2019s Landscape Paintings in a Climate-Critical Present), which is supported by the New Carlsberg Foundation. In addition to being a project researcher at SMK, I am a regenerative farmer at the Holmager farm.\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_5277\">1<\/a><\/sup> It has followed us across great distances and we have lived alongside it in a close mutual relationship, tending to it as herders while it in i has given us its milk, its meat, its labour and its manure. In Denmark, cattle have very much shaped the landscape. For centuries, they have ensured that the grasslands did not become forests, and the monocultures that have increasingly spread across the Danish landscape largely serve to provide fodder for livestock. Without cattle, the landscape would have looked completely different.<\/p>\n<p>Cattle have played an important role in landscape painting through the years, and this is also true for the two decades from 1880 to 1900, a time described as the point when intensive agriculture with large livestock holdings, imported fodder and intensive crop farming had its major breakthrough in Denmark.<sup id=\"footnote-2\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"2\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_5277\" data-sup-value=\"J\u00f8rgen Dieckmann Rasmussen et al.: \u20181860\u20131914\u2019, in Claus Bj\u00f8rn et al. (eds.): <em>Det Danske Landbrugs Historie<\/em>, Landbohistorisk Selskab 1988, volume III, pp. 260, 265, 277\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_5277\">2<\/a><\/sup> In several respects, the type of agriculture we see in Denmark today represents a further development of this approach.<sup id=\"footnote-3\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"3\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_5277\" data-sup-value=\"Signe Brieghel et al.: \u2018Nye k\u00f8er p\u00e5 gammelt gr\u00e6s. Foder, stofskifte og planet\u00e6re gr\u00e6nser i dansk malkekv\u00e6gbrug\u2019 in <em>Kulturstudier, <\/em>no. 2, 2022, pp. 94-95\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_5277\">3<\/a><\/sup> Turning to the realm of art museums, landscape paintings from this period can shed light on that development and how it is connected to our experience of the world. However, this requires us to see landscape painting in a new way. Thus far, discussions of agricultural subject matter from the period have tended to focus on humankind\u2019s struggle for existence or on stylistic developments impelled by influence from abroad, especially France.<sup id=\"footnote-4\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"4\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_5277\" data-sup-value=\"The landscape paintings from 1880\u20131900 have been seen in this way for many years, and among the many landscape painters who worked in the period, the ones who shared this focus have been favoured in collection hangs and special exhibitions. Prominent examples include L.A Ring and Theodor Philipsen. A count of SMK\u2019s collection display in October 2023 shows that forty-seven paintings created by Danish artists and dated between 1880 and 1900 are on display. Among them are ten that depict cattle or landscapes where cattle have left their mark. Five of them are by Theodor Philipsen, while three were painted by L.A. Ring. Art historians such as Peter Michael Hornung, Peter N\u00f8rgaard Larsen, Finn Terman Frederiksen and Henrik Wivel have closely studied the artists of this period with a focus on style and existential issues. Peter Michael Hornung: <em>Ny Dansk Kunsthistorie<\/em>, <em>Realismen<\/em>, vol. 4, Fogtdal 1993; Peter N\u00f8rgaard Larsen and Finn Terman Frederiksen: <em>L.A. Ring \u2013 p\u00e5 kanten af verden, <\/em>Statens Museum for Kunst 2006; Finn Terman Frederiksen: <em>Theodor Philipsen: en traditionsbevidst nyskaber,<\/em> Randers Kunstmuseum 2016; Henrik Wivel: <em>Det glasklare hjerte. <\/em><em>En biografi om L.A. Ring<\/em>, Strandberg Publishing 2020. Furthermore, Margit Mogensen has analysed agricultural subject matter from the period with a focus on the human body: Margit Mogensen: \u2018Om realisme i 1800-tallets maleri. Kroppen, jorden og afgr\u00f8den\u2019 in <em>Forskningscenter menneske og natur,<\/em> vol. 8, no. 1, 1992 (<a href=https:\/\/tidsskrift.dk\/bola\/article\/view\/119804\/167534 target=_blank rel=noopener>https:\/\/tidsskrift.dk\/bola\/article\/view\/119804\/167534<\/a>).\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_5277\">4<\/a><\/sup><\/p>\n<p>The works acquired for SMK during that period display far greater breadth than that, however. These depictions of cattle can give us an important indication of the changes in our outlook on the world; changes that took place when the development of industrialised agriculture gained momentum. The works offer an opportunity to explore what was at stake at a time when a specialised and professionalised approach to agriculture greatly changed our relationship to our surroundings and thus to the landscape. The artists of the time addressed this theme directly. This holds true when artists, through the representation of individual animals, offer us a point of entry for experiencing the landscape and its life forms \u2013 and also when, through colours and shapes, they let us uphold the illusion that no one in the landscape is looking back at us.<\/p>\n<p>In a time of climate and biodiversity crises when very few of us actively cultivate the land or interact with domestic animals, the question of how we meet this part of our history in museums matters. Inspired by the way in which Maria Puig de la Bellacasa, professor at the History of Consciousness Department at <a href=\"https:\/\/humanities.ucsc.edu\/academics\/faculty\/index.php?uid=mpuigdel\">UC Santa Cruz<\/a>, engages with the notion of our environment as a multispecies community, I use cattle to pave the way for a new understanding of landscape painting, one which can reflect back on our understanding of the times in which we live.<\/p>\n<p>At present, the UN, acting via The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), urges us to change the way we farm.<sup id=\"footnote-5\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"5\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_5277\" data-sup-value=\"The 2019 IPCC report <em>Climate Change and Land <\/em>examines the relationship between land use and anthropogenic climate change and points to how an estimated 23% of total anthropogenic greenhouse gas emissions originate from agriculture, forestry and other land use (A.3.6). Conservation agriculture and other sustainable land management with its minimal tillage are highlighted as part of the solution to sequester carbon and prevent desertification (A.4.3, B.5.1). Priyadarshi R. Shukla et al.: \u2018Summary for Policymakers\u2019 in <em>Climate Change and Land: IPCC Special Report on Climate Change, Desertification, Land Degradation, Sustainable Land Management, Food Security, and Greenhouse Gas Fluxes in Terrestrial Ecosystems<\/em>, Cambridge University Press 2022 .doi:10.1017\/9781009157988.001\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_5277\">5<\/a><\/sup> As regards Danish agriculture, the warnings particularly concern the problematic aspects of our large number of domestic animals and the extensive areas used for growing animal feed in the form of monocultures, an issue also pointed out by organisations such as The Danish Society for Nature Conservation.<sup id=\"footnote-6\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"6\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_5277\" data-sup-value=\"Rikke Lundsgaard et al.: <em>S\u00e5dan ligger landet 2022. Tal om landbruget<\/em>, Danmarks Naturfredningsforening and Dyrenes Beskyttelse 2022 (<a href=https:\/\/www.dn.dk\/om-os\/publikationer\/sadan-ligger-landet\/ target=_blank rel=noopener>https:\/\/www.dn.dk\/om-os\/publikationer\/sadan-ligger-landet\/<\/a>)\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_5277\">6<\/a><\/sup> The Danish agricultural landscape has become political. This makes it all the more interesting to examine the role played by art in the period 1880 to 1900. When this type of agriculture became firmly established, artists not only supported the new order but also, in an activist-like manner, showed us what was going on.<\/p>\n<h2>Between constructed and living landscapes<\/h2>\n<p>Informed by the theoretical approaches of ecofeminism, New Materialism and posthumanism, Maria Puig de la Bellacasa points out that this outside world consists of \u2018more-than-human worlds\u2019. Here man is only one agent (or agency) among the many organisms, objects and physical forces which together create worlds. Every action and thought that takes place here is situated in a multiplicity of relationships and interactions. Here it is impossible to distinguish between man and nature and between the living and non-living. It is not only us and the animals who act; so too do plants and soil, and our agency and that of others cannot be seen or thought of independently of each other.<sup id=\"footnote-7\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"7\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_5277\" data-sup-value=\"Maria Puig de la Bellacasa: <em>Matters of Care: Speculative Ethics in More than Human Worlds<\/em>, University of Minnesota Press 2017, pp. 1\u20132, 69\u201370. Michael Marder and Giovanni Aloi, writing in the introduction to <em>Vegetal Entwinements in Philosophy and Art. A <\/em><em>Reader,<\/em> MIT Press 2023, present one of the most recent succinct outlines of the field.\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_5277\">7<\/a><\/sup><\/p>\n<p>This awareness of an outside world of agency and complexity, a world created through the interaction of many different forms of life and materialities, has only to a limited extent been discussed in relation to landscape painting. Landscape architect Anne Whiston Spirn, however, makes clear that the etymology of the term \u2018landscape\u2019 points to a state of mutual creation: \u2018people shape the land, and the land shapes people\u2019,<sup id=\"footnote-8\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"8\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_5277\" data-sup-value=\"Mark Cheetham: <em>Landscape into Eco Art: Articulations of Nature Since the &#8217;60s<\/em>, Penn State University Press 2018, p. 19\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_5277\">8<\/a><\/sup> and art history has applied a particular focus on how humans create and manipulate the landscape.\u00a0\u2018A \u201clandscape\u201d, cultivated or wild, is already artifice\u2019 is the opening sentence of art historian Malcolm Andrews\u2019s <em>Landscape into Western Art, <\/em>and as art historian Mark Cheetham puts it: \u2018<em>For humans<\/em>, landscape is always cultural, especially when that implies that the practice of \u201clandscaping\u201d in its broadest sense articulates border lines with what is not human and between human communities\u2019.<sup id=\"footnote-9\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"9\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_5277\" data-sup-value=\"Malcolm Andrews: <em>Landscape and Western Art, <\/em>Oxford University Press 1999, p. 1. Cheetham 2018, p. 20\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_5277\">9<\/a><\/sup> His book <em>Landscape into Eco Art <\/em>very precisely maps the position and impact that landscape painting has had for those artists who have since worked with nature as a focal point. Here it is clear that landscape painting is viewed with great scepticism as an instrument for the colonial and profit-oriented gaze instrumental in creating both global injustice and climate and biodiversity crises.<sup id=\"footnote-10\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"10\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_5277\" data-sup-value=\"Cheetham 2018, p. 4\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_5277\">10<\/a><\/sup> At the same time, it has been pointed out \u2013 for example by historian W.J.T. Mitchell in the second edition of <em>Landscape and Power <\/em>\u2013 that the power that can be expressed through a landscape is diffuse and weaker than the power exercised by armies, governments and corporations. According to Mitchell, this diffuseness rests on the fact that a landscape invites you to view the totality rather than individual elements. To see the landscape is therefore to look for nothing or to see yourself seeing.<sup id=\"footnote-11\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"11\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_5277\" data-sup-value=\"WJT Mitchell: \u2018Preface to Second Edition\u2019, <em>Landscape and Power<\/em>, The University of Chicago Press 2002, pp. vii\u2013viii\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_5277\">11<\/a><\/sup> However, the power of landscape painting should be reassessed. How we see the world around us affects how we act and respond to the climate and biodiversity crises, and looking at the landscape just to see oneself is problematic in a time that, according to the UN, demands urgent action.<\/p>\n<p>It is thus crucial to look critically at how landscape painting has helped to support a utilitarian, profit-oriented view of our world around us, encouraging a myopia that \u2013 as Mitchell points out \u2013 puts emphasis on the act of seeing and on establishing an overview rather than on the living and complex world of which we are part. At the same time, it is also crucial to highlight the many artists who do not fit into this landscape concept and who emphasise the living and creative landscape where humankind is just one among many agents. The notion of a living landscape is present in many of the artists who worked in the nineteenth century. As the writer and thinker Amitav Ghosh puts it, the idea of landscapes being alive is not a present-day invention. Rather, according to Ghosh, the notion of the \u2018artificial\u2019 and non-living landscape as a phenomenon can be localised to a period of only a few hundred years within a particular, elitist part of Western thinking.<sup id=\"footnote-12\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"12\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_5277\" data-sup-value=\"Amitav Ghosh: <em>The Nutmeg\u2019s Curse: Parables for a Planet in Crisis<\/em>, The University of Chicago Press 2022, pp. 36\u201339\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_5277\">12<\/a><\/sup> Several others have pointed this out. For example, the philosopher Lorraine Code\u2019s <em>Ecological Thinking<\/em> posits a particularly science-oriented understanding of nature in the Age of Enlightenment and looks at how it has contributed to creating the environmental crises that characterise our time.<sup id=\"footnote-13\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"13\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_5277\" data-sup-value=\"Lorraine Code, <em>Ecological Thinking: The Politics of Epistemic Location<\/em>, Oxford University Press 2006, p. 9\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_5277\">13<\/a><\/sup> Bridging the Enlightenment and our highly industrialised age, the nineteenth century is interesting in terms of examining how the two notions of the outside world as living and non-living clash and fray.<\/p>\n<p>Looking into the tradition of landscape painting for the negotiation of such a dialectic, the cow can serve as a landmark by which to navigate. Testing the distributed agency of landscape through the cow is interesting because it can be easier to empathise with a farm animal than with wild animals or plants whose relationship to humans does not have the same intensity. With its millennia-long history of association with man and given the ways in which it interacts in multi-faceted ways with its surroundings via grazing, fertilising, trampling and traction, the cow makes for an obvious candidate for study. It offers an empathetic point of entry into the landscape depicted \u2013 although the question of empathy between cattle as production animals and humankind pose thorny questions of what empathy and care really are.<sup id=\"footnote-14\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"14\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_5277\" data-sup-value=\"Empathy and care are complex and not exclusively positive concepts. Both can be reductive and manipulative. Bellacasa insists that care is always situated. There are no normative moral obligations but a close, impure involvement in the world where questions about care must be asked; Bellacasa 2017, p. 6. As regards empathy, I take my starting point in how animal studies draw on Jacques Derrida\u2019s thoughts on how the shared vulnerability and mortality of humans and animals can be said to deconstruct anthropomorphism. Thus, empathy is not driven by anthropomorphism where one looks for human traits in the animal, but rather by a recognition of conditions and vulnerabilities shared by humans and animals alike. Danielle Sands: <em>Animal Writing. Storytelling, Selfhood and the Limits of Empathy<\/em>, Edinburgh University Press 2019, pp. 14\u201315\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_5277\">14<\/a><\/sup><\/p>\n<p>Cattle appear in many different ways in Danish art between 1880 and 1900. This applies, for example, to in Niels Skovgaard\u2019s painting <em>Willows beside a Meadow near Nys\u00f8 Manor, South Zealand <\/em>[<strong>Fig. 1<\/strong>]<em>, <\/em>where the cow \u2013 despite the title\u2019s focus on the willow trees \u2013 forms an important point of entry to the peaceful and lush nature depicted by the artist. Like the human figure with its back turned to the viewer, a typical trope of the time when representing humans indoors, the cow helps the viewer\u2019s gaze into the picture.<\/p>\n<figure id=\"attachment_5255\" aria-describedby=\"caption-attachment-5255\" style=\"width: 1600px\" class=\"wp-caption aligncenter\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"wp-image-5255 size-full\" src=\"https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/wp-content\/uploads\/2024\/03\/Pile-paa-en-eng-ved-Nysoe.jpg\" alt=\"Pile p\u00e5 en eng ved Nys\u00f8\" width=\"1600\" height=\"1118\" srcset=\"https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/wp-content\/uploads\/2024\/03\/Pile-paa-en-eng-ved-Nysoe.jpg 1600w, https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/wp-content\/uploads\/2024\/03\/Pile-paa-en-eng-ved-Nysoe-380x266.jpg 380w, https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/wp-content\/uploads\/2024\/03\/Pile-paa-en-eng-ved-Nysoe-1546x1080.jpg 1546w, https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/wp-content\/uploads\/2024\/03\/Pile-paa-en-eng-ved-Nysoe-768x537.jpg 768w, https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/wp-content\/uploads\/2024\/03\/Pile-paa-en-eng-ved-Nysoe-1536x1073.jpg 1536w\" sizes=\"auto, (max-width: 1600px) 100vw, 1600px\" \/><figcaption id=\"caption-attachment-5255\" class=\"wp-caption-text\"><strong>Fig. 1.<\/strong> Niels Skovgaard, <em>Willows beside a Meadow near Nys\u00f8 Manor, South Zealand,<\/em> 1897. Oil on canvas, 44 x 63 cm. Acquired 1898. SMK, KMS1569<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n<p>The reddish-brown cow seems immersed in a landscape full of agents. It swishes its tail, perhaps to keep insects at bay, and is seen through the gently swaying blades of grass in the foreground. In the right-hand corner are docks which, like the row of willows, are reproduced in great detail with a keen eye for the glossy, almost glistening upper sides of the leaves. A stork struts in the background to the right. The cow is not only an observer of these many forms of life but also a discreet agent when it bends and presses down vegetation with its body, turning the plants that break into food for new ones. To this we may add the fact that it is presumably chewing the cud after stimulating grass growth by biting down the plants, and that it might soon be fertilising its little green corner of the world. The multiple ways in which it interacts with its surroundings stimulate a richness that we would today treasure as biodiversity, and Skovgaard implicitly revolves around them in his picture. However, certain aspects are absent: there are no other cows nor any direct human interaction. The cow\u2019s halter, however, shows that it is tethered, and had it lived a life without humans, its physiognomy would have looked quite different, just as it would hardly have been alone without its flock.<\/p>\n<p>The question of looking at living landscapes with many agents is not necessarily about setting the animal free from its relationship with humans, but rather about seeing and treating the cow as part of a living world. This outlook on the world is different from the one linked to production-focused agriculture.<\/p>\n<p>A landscape painting comes into being through co-creation. Real plants and animals have not only informed, but related to the artist and registered his presence. As anthropologist Eduardo Kohn has argued on the basis of Charles Sanders Peirce\u2019s semiotic theory, the act of reading and exchanging signs is not the exclusive purview of humans.<sup id=\"footnote-15\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"15\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_5277\" data-sup-value=\"Eduardo Kohn: <em>How Forests Think: Toward an Anthropology Beyond the Human, <\/em>University of California Press 2013, pp. 7-9\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_5277\">15<\/a><\/sup> Just as the portrait painter uses their work process to get under the skin of their sitter and reproduce their vulnerability, pride or other psychological traits, the landscape painter can spend hours in front of plants, animals or geological formations to immerse themselves in the life unfolding before them and transfer their observations to a flat surface. Another equally radical extreme also exists: pigments can be applied to a painting support in a process that focuses solely on colour, brush and picture plane without any reference to a concrete reality. Still, even those artists who evoke landscapes with just a few lines have at some point let their gaze rest on one. Something has registered a presence at some previous point in time, even if the painter chose to shut most of it out. Most painters operate in the wide range between the two extremes. The issue is thus not a question of accurate verisimilitude, but of choosing to represent the living.<\/p>\n<p>The American portrait painter Alice Neel aptly describes the empathy-oriented extreme when she explains her own process with sitters: \u2018I get so identified when I paint them, when they go home I feel frightful. I have no self \u2013 I\u2019ve gone into this other person [\u2026] It is my way of overcoming the alienation. It\u2019s my ticket to reality\u2019. And: \u2018they unconsciously assume their most characteristic pose, which in a way involves all their character and social standing \u2013 what the world had done to them and their retaliation\u2019.<sup id=\"footnote-16\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"16\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_5277\" data-sup-value=\"Kristine Stiles and Peter Selz (eds.): <em>Theories and Documents of Contemporary Art. A Sourcebook of Artists&#8217; Writings, <\/em>University of California Press 2012, p. 249 and Alice Neel and Amy Young: <em>Alice Neel: Black and White<\/em>, Robert Miller Gallery 2002, unpaginated. Alice Neels made her statements in the 1980s.\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_5277\">16<\/a><\/sup><\/p>\n<p>Neel becomes so deeply involved in how each individual relates to the world that she feels empty when her subject matter disappears. She reproduces a life world of which she herself is part, focusing on the mutual exchanges between the living. If we transfer this to Skovgaard\u2019s picture, we see how Skovgaard empathises with the cow and the landscape, recording what the world has done to the cow, the stork and the willows \u2013 and what the cow, the stork and the willows have done to the world. They \u2013 or in a broader sense the world \u2013 can look back at us through the picture, and this opportunity to form a link between us and the world is a particularly interesting subject for study in light of the developments seen in rural Denmark back when Skovgaard painted his picture. In this context, empathy constitutes a way of trying to open up and share the world of others, and in that resides an ethic that is crucial in a time of climate and biodiversity crises.<\/p>\n<h2>Milk yield and productionism<\/h2>\n<p>According to <em>Det danske landbrugs historie <\/em>(The History of Danish Agriculture), in 1880 Danish agriculture was poised on the verge of \u2018the decade in which intensive agriculture had its breakthrough\u2019, ushering in a 65% increase in the Danish livestock population up to 1914.<sup id=\"footnote-17\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"17\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_5277\" data-sup-value=\"Rasmussen et al. 1988, p. 260\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_5277\">17<\/a><\/sup> The book puts forward figures and speaks about the \u2018increase in animal production\u2019, stating that \u2018the milk yield per cow increased strongly, and the fattened animals were ready for slaughter at ever-greater speed\u2019.<sup id=\"footnote-18\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"18\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_5277\" data-sup-value=\"Rasmussen et al. 1988, p. 261\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_5277\">18<\/a><\/sup> The rhetoric reflects an interest in numbers over life that is also evident in volume 2 of <em>Landmandsbogen<\/em><em>\u00a0<\/em>(The Farmer\u2019s Handbook) from 1895, which very tellingly opens with a vignette of symmetrically arranged skulls that is repeated with variations throughout the book <strong>[Fig. 2]<\/strong>. In the preface, Harald Goldschmidt, docent in animal husbandry at the Royal Danish Veterinary and Agricultural College, specifically points out that the purpose of the book is \u2018to make animal husbandry as profitable as possible\u2019.<sup id=\"footnote-19\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"19\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_5277\" data-sup-value=\"T. Westermann and H. Goldschmidt: <em>Landmandsbogen: Raadgiver for den danske Landmand og hans Husstand ved den daglige Gerning, <\/em>Copenhagen 1895, p. 1\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_5277\">19<\/a><\/sup><\/p>\n<figure id=\"attachment_5261\" aria-describedby=\"caption-attachment-5261\" style=\"width: 1451px\" class=\"wp-caption aligncenter\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"wp-image-5261 size-full\" src=\"https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/wp-content\/uploads\/2024\/03\/Vignet-fra-landmandshaandbogen.png\" alt=\"\" width=\"1451\" height=\"562\" srcset=\"https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/wp-content\/uploads\/2024\/03\/Vignet-fra-landmandshaandbogen.png 1451w, https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/wp-content\/uploads\/2024\/03\/Vignet-fra-landmandshaandbogen-380x147.png 380w, https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/wp-content\/uploads\/2024\/03\/Vignet-fra-landmandshaandbogen-768x297.png 768w\" sizes=\"auto, (max-width: 1451px) 100vw, 1451px\" \/><figcaption id=\"caption-attachment-5261\" class=\"wp-caption-text\"><strong>Fig. 2.<\/strong>R. Chr., vignette from <em>Landmandsbogen<\/em>, volume 2, 1895<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n<p>Such a focus on efficiency that directly impacts the bottom line is the epitome of how, according to Maria Puig de la Bellacasa, a particular \u2018productionist\u2019 mode of thinking has evolved in agriculture. A drive to create ever-increasing dividends in which a one-sided focus on yield colonises all other relationships and values. Farmers have always focused on profit, but not necessarily at the expense of their relationship with other forms of life and future possibilities for cultivation.<sup id=\"footnote-20\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"20\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_5277\" data-sup-value=\"Maria Puig de la Bellacasa: \u2018Making Time for Soil: Technoscientific Futurity Pace of Care\u2019 in <em>Social Studies of Science, <\/em>vol. 45, no. 5, 2015, pp. 691\u2013716: p. 699\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_5277\">20<\/a><\/sup> In this kind of thinking, the main focus is on the product rather than the process. Looking specifically at cattle, this means that the focus is not on how many cows a given area of grassland can support. Rather, a target is set for how much milk is desired, and then feed is purchased and produced to match this. Similarly, cows are specifically bred to give more milk. No account is taken of the fact that resources such as feed are limited in terms of time and space, and that even within the context of globalised agriculture one must at some point consider what is available and how quickly resources are regenerated.<sup id=\"footnote-21\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"21\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_5277\" data-sup-value=\"Signe Brieghel et al. 2022, pp. 94\u201395\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_5277\">21<\/a><\/sup> As climate scientists such as Will Steffen and Katherine Richardson have pointed out, failure to consider this aspect involves the risk of exceeding the boundaries of what the planet can sustain. Thus, they emphasise that any production must be sustainable.<sup id=\"footnote-22\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"22\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_5277\" data-sup-value=\"W. Steffen et al.: \u2018Planetary boundaries: Guiding human development on a changing planet\u2019 in <em>Science,<\/em> vol. 347, issue 6223, 2015. According to Brieghel et al. 2022, p. 188.\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_5277\">22<\/a><\/sup><\/p>\n<p>Productionist thinking does not take this into account \u2013 nor does it consider all the other ways in which cows create worlds around them: how the life and death of other species is conditioned by the cow\u2019s grazing, trampling , manure, heat, etc., and how the cow interacts with other life forms.<sup id=\"footnote-23\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"23\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_5277\" data-sup-value=\"Brieghel et al. 2022 p. 197\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_5277\">23<\/a><\/sup> The cow is seen purely as an individual unit of production, and the farm where it lives is not a diverse world that supports a family and a local community, but an industrial enterprise and a workplace focused on a limited range of products.<\/p>\n<p>This productionist thinking, which as far as cows are concerned has a one-sided focus on milk, is clearly evident in contemporary and later descriptions of this development in Danish agriculture. In the many pages of <em>The Farmer&#8217;s Handbook, <\/em>farmers could find inspiration on subjects such as what particularly optimised cows would be able to yield and what kind of input they required. The question is whether they could also find inspiration at SMK \u2013 the national gallery of Denmark? Among the 200 paintings dated <em>and<\/em> acquired for the collection between 1880 and 1900, we find a total of forty-two where the cow, bull, steer or calf is a focal point or has left an imprint on the depicted landscape.<sup id=\"footnote-24\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"24\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_5277\" data-sup-value=\"The study of how the cow is present in landscape paintings was carried out via the search engine \u2018SMK Open\u2019, which allows users to select media, date and time of acquisition and then manually separate landscape paintings from other types of subject matter: <a href=https:\/\/open.smk.dk\/ target=_blank rel=noopener>open.smk.dk\/<\/a> accessed September 2023.\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_5277\">24<\/a><\/sup> Here we find paintings where the animal is painted in great detail and with obvious agency, such as in <em>Willows beside a Meadow near Nys\u00f8 Manor, South Zealand<\/em> by Niels Skovgaard, <em>A Runaway Cow <\/em>by Michael Therkildsen and <em>A Road in J\u00e6gersborg Deer Park, North of Copenhagen, Autumn <\/em>by Theodor Philipsen. There are also works by Otto Bache and N.P. Mols such as <em>Driving Cows out of the Cowhouse <\/em>and <em>Beet Lifting<\/em>, where the animals look out at us and invite us into their reality, and there are landscapes which the cows have helped to shape, yet where they seem absent as creatures with agency. For example, this holds true of Julius Paulsen\u2019s <em>Landscape near Kolding, Jutland, at Sunset.<\/em> All these works were acquired during the 1880s and 1890s, the time when our shared notions of what a museum should be took shape, and they offer an impression of what were considered desirable representations of the Danish agricultural landscape at the time. Most were bought while the major landowner Otto Rosen\u00f8rn-Lehn was director of the museum, acquiring works in collaboration with various co-purchasers \u2013 including the prominent art historian Julius Lange.<sup id=\"footnote-25\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"25\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_5277\" data-sup-value=\"Villads Villadsen: <em>Statens Museum for Kunst 1827\u20131952<\/em>, Statens Museum for Kunst 1998, pp. 71\u2013104\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_5277\">25<\/a><\/sup> Rosen\u00f8rn-Lehn greatly influenced how the industrialisation of the Danish landscape was perceived by the segment of the population who visited the museum.<\/p>\n<h2>A Runaway Cow<\/h2>\n<p>Under a sky tinted in shades of grey and white, a farmer strides determinedly ahead, a tether tucked behind his back while his right hand is extended in a gesture of enticement. A cow watches him warily, ready to either let herself be tethered or run away. In the meadow, daisies bloom among clover, grass and other herbs. The artist and farmer\u2019s son Michael Therkildsen captured this scene in the painting <em>A Runaway Cow <\/em><strong>[Fig. 3]<\/strong> from 1890, and the work was purchased for the national gallery of Denmark the following year. In addition to a detailed depiction of the cow which has escaped its tether, the picture also incorporates fleeting yet precise representations of the many plant species that grow in the meadow. One certainly understands the cow\u2019s choice of setting, and Therkildsen devotes his full focus on the relationship between cow and farmer, assigning agency and initiative to both. Here we are far removed from rhetoric on milk yield: a state of balance is maintained in the picture, between sky and meadow and between cow and farmer. There is communication here, but also scepticism, and one sense that the cow will only be caught if she chooses to surrender.<\/p>\n<figure id=\"attachment_5247\" aria-describedby=\"caption-attachment-5247\" style=\"width: 2560px\" class=\"wp-caption aligncenter\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"wp-image-5247 size-full\" src=\"https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/wp-content\/uploads\/2024\/03\/En-ko-loes-scaled.jpg\" alt=\"Michael Therkildsen, En ko l\u00f8s, 1890, olie p\u00e5 l\u00e6rred, 53 x 66 cm. K\u00f8bt 1891. SMK, KMS1439\" width=\"2560\" height=\"2069\" srcset=\"https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/wp-content\/uploads\/2024\/03\/En-ko-loes-scaled.jpg 2560w, https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/wp-content\/uploads\/2024\/03\/En-ko-loes-380x307.jpg 380w, https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/wp-content\/uploads\/2024\/03\/En-ko-loes-1336x1080.jpg 1336w, https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/wp-content\/uploads\/2024\/03\/En-ko-loes-768x621.jpg 768w, https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/wp-content\/uploads\/2024\/03\/En-ko-loes-1536x1242.jpg 1536w, https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/wp-content\/uploads\/2024\/03\/En-ko-loes-2048x1655.jpg 2048w\" sizes=\"auto, (max-width: 2560px) 100vw, 2560px\" \/><figcaption id=\"caption-attachment-5247\" class=\"wp-caption-text\"><strong>Fig. 3.<\/strong>Michael Therkildsen, <em>A Runaway Cow<\/em>, 1890. Oil on canvas, 53 x 66 cm. Acquired 1891. SMK, KMS1439<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n<p>Tethering your cow in a particular piece of land you wanted to have grazed and fertilised was a widespread practice at the time. The daily chores involved moving, watering and milking as needed. Often, a boy was tasked with moving it and a girl with milking it, and as a farmer\u2019s son Therkildsen must have been familiar with such work.<sup id=\"footnote-26\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"26\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_5277\" data-sup-value=\"In his memoirs, Kristian Bruun describes the work as a herd boy in a tone not far removed from Therkildsen\u2019s portrayal. Kr. Bruun: \u2018Drengek\u00e5r i Vestjylland under landbrugskrisen\u2019, 1958, pp. 430\u201379: pp. 453\u20137. (Available at <a href=https:\/\/tidsskrift.dk\/ target=_blank rel=noopener>tidsskrift.dk<\/a>)\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_5277\">26<\/a><\/sup> <em>The Farmer&#8217;s Handbook <\/em>describes tethering as more economical than leaving the cows free to roam, as this involves less trampling and fewer plants being rejected. From the point of view of health care, however, free-range farming is preferred as it gives the animals the opportunity to move and enables the cow to find shelter and choose the plants it likes the best. A third alternative, feeding the cattle in a barn for a greater or lesser part of the year, is also described in the handbook, specifying how various skin and gas problems derived from this practice can be overcome.<sup id=\"footnote-27\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"27\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_5277\" data-sup-value=\"Westermann and Goldschmidt 1895, pp. 141\u2013146\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_5277\">27<\/a><\/sup><\/p>\n<p>It is likely that Therkildsen has here depicted the breed known as Jysk Kv\u00e6g (Jutland Cattle), which was a dominant breed at this time in Jutland despite many attempts to have it replaced or \u2018refined\u2019.<sup id=\"footnote-28\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"28\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_5277\" data-sup-value=\"Axel Appel: \u2018II Det jydske Kv\u00e6g\u2019, in Westermann and Goldschmidt 1895, p. 245. Rasmussen 1988, pp. 333\u201335\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_5277\">28<\/a><\/sup> Being described in <em>The Farmer\u2019s Handbook <\/em>as a pleasant, undemanding and hardy breed with juicy meat and a reasonably good, consistent milk yield, this animal reflects a type of agriculture which focuses on self-sufficiency and a barter economy.<sup id=\"footnote-29\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"29\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_5277\" data-sup-value=\"Appel 1895, p. 246\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_5277\">29<\/a><\/sup> In such contexts the cow\u2019s amiability and hardiness are as important as its milk and meat, and being economical in terms of its demand for feed was crucial. Therkildsen thus shows us a way of keeping cows that was prevalent until around 1880, yet which was changing at the time as the sale of milk was becoming increasingly central to financial viability, including for smaller farms. Gradually, not only most of the grain and turnip production from the fields, but also substantial imports of feedstuffs would be processed through livestock.<sup id=\"footnote-30\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"30\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_5277\" data-sup-value=\"Rasmussen 1988, p. 313\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_5277\">30<\/a><\/sup> However, Therkildsen\u2019s interest does not centre on this development. He depicts a form of operation common at the time, focusing on the cow\u2019s agency and interaction with the farmer. His narrative style differs greatly from the agricultural history being written by the authorities. Therkildsen\u2019s version veers much closer to the many personal accounts of caring for cows, such as Kristian Bruun\u2019s account of letting a farm\u2019s few cows \u2018pass by tempting fields of clover\u2019 on the way to the place where they were to be tethered.<sup id=\"footnote-31\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"31\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_5277\" data-sup-value=\"Bruun 1958, p. 453\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_5277\">31<\/a><\/sup><\/p>\n<p>A cow is also loose in Theodor Philipsen\u2019s painting <em>A Road in J\u00e6gersborg Deer Park, North of Copenhagen, Autumn<\/em> <strong>[Fig. 4]<\/strong><em>, <\/em>and its agency is important to the narrative of the monumental painting. While the cow is not mentioned in the title, the picture\u2019s point of view belongs to it. We see the forest where the leaves are turning, individual streaks of sunlight enhancing the play of colours. We join the cow in looking towards three other cows among the trees, their red coats matching the reddish-golden autumn leaves. Like a wanderer, the black pied cow is making its leisurely way into the picture, its head raised as it picks up the eddies of the wind and the humidity in the air. Using rapidly applied, impasto brushstrokes, the painting technique emphasises atmosphere and a sense of capturing something ephemeral.<\/p>\n<figure id=\"attachment_5463\" aria-describedby=\"caption-attachment-5463\" style=\"width: 2560px\" class=\"wp-caption aligncenter\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"wp-image-5463 size-full\" src=\"https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/wp-content\/uploads\/2024\/05\/En-vej-i-Dyrehaven.-Efteraar_skaleret-scaled.jpg\" alt=\"Theodor Philipsen, En vej i Dyrehaven. Efter\u00e5r, 1889, olie p\u00e5 l\u00e6rred, 118 x 180 cm. K\u00f8bt 1890. SMK, KMS1359\" width=\"2560\" height=\"1706\" srcset=\"https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/wp-content\/uploads\/2024\/05\/En-vej-i-Dyrehaven.-Efteraar_skaleret-scaled.jpg 1621w, https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/wp-content\/uploads\/2024\/05\/En-vej-i-Dyrehaven.-Efteraar_skaleret-380x253.jpg 380w, https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/wp-content\/uploads\/2024\/05\/En-vej-i-Dyrehaven.-Efteraar_skaleret-1620x1080.jpg 1620w, https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/wp-content\/uploads\/2024\/05\/En-vej-i-Dyrehaven.-Efteraar_skaleret-768x512.jpg 768w, https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/wp-content\/uploads\/2024\/05\/En-vej-i-Dyrehaven.-Efteraar_skaleret-1536x1024.jpg 1536w, https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/wp-content\/uploads\/2024\/05\/En-vej-i-Dyrehaven.-Efteraar_skaleret-2048x1365.jpg 2048w\" sizes=\"auto, (max-width: 2560px) 100vw, 2560px\" \/><figcaption id=\"caption-attachment-5463\" class=\"wp-caption-text\"><strong>Fig. 4.<\/strong>Theodor Philipsen, <em>A Road in J\u00e6gersborg Deer Park, North of Copenhagen, Autumn<\/em>, 1889. Oil on canvas, 118 x 180 cm. Acquired 1890. SMK, KMS1359<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n<p>Philipsen was trained in agriculture. For two and a half years he was apprenticed at his uncle\u2019s farm H\u00f8jagergaard near Slangerup, and he was subsequently a tenant farmer at Hiller\u00f8dsholm for two years. Both were large farms, and Hiller\u00f8dsholm was a \u2018hovedg\u00e5rd\u2019 \u2013 a major estate \u2013 with a royal stud farm and a dairy. Thus, Philipsen would have been familiar with large- scale animal husbandry, and in his capacity as an artist he visited numerous manors and major estates around Denmark, aided by his uncle\u2019s extensive network of connections.<sup id=\"footnote-32\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"32\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_5277\" data-sup-value=\"Frederiksen 2016, pp. 42, 47\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_5277\">32<\/a><\/sup> The fact that he selected the J\u00e6gersborg Deer Park as the backdrop for these cows raises the question of who sent these cows to the forest in autumn time. The area was originally the property of the crown, but in 1669\u201370 the village of Stokkerup was demolished, the farmers relocated, and the forest fenced in, becoming entirely dedicated to the king\u2019s deer hunting. Having said that, public access to the area was introduced in 1756, and markets and various types of entertainment arose in the area.<sup id=\"footnote-33\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"33\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_5277\" data-sup-value=\"Stella Blichfeldt et al.: <em>J\u00e6gersborg Dyrehave<\/em>, Trap Danmark [accessed 30 October 2023]. <a href=https:\/\/trap.lex.dk\/J%C3%A6gersborg_Dyrehave#:~:text=Det%20afvekslende%20landskab%20med%20b%C3%A5de,%2C%20knopsvane%2C%20hvinand%20og%20gr%C3%A5and. target=_blank rel=noopener>J\u00e6gersborg Dyrehave | lex.dk \u2013 Trap Danmark<\/a>\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_5277\">33<\/a><\/sup><\/p>\n<p>Given the nature of the Deer Park, the cow comes across as a foreign element or pure invention according to Philipsen researcher Finn Terman Frederiksen.<a href=\"#_ftnref9\" name=\"_ftn9\"><\/a><sup id=\"footnote-34\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"34\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_5277\" data-sup-value=\"Frederiksen 2016, p. 253\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_5277\">34<\/a><\/sup> Perhaps, however, it can be seen as a kind of ghost. Its presence points towards a form of agriculture practiced before the Danish agrarian reforms at the end of the eighteenth century, one where town cowherds would take the cattle to pasture or to the forest until the 1805 Forest Act introduced the forest reserve regulations which stated that the woods had to be kept free from livestock.<sup id=\"footnote-35\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"35\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_5277\" data-sup-value=\"Bo Fritzb\u00f8ger: <em>Kulturskoven: dansk skovbrug fra oldtid til nutid, <\/em>Gyldendal 1994, p. 70. This approach to silviculture is depicted in works such as Hermann Carmiencke, <em>Woodland at Helleb\u00e6k. Afternoon<\/em>, 1835. SMK.\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_5277\">35<\/a><\/sup> Might Stokkerup\u2019s cows be haunting these trees? Perhaps the painting is Philipsen\u2019s reply and comment on a strong tradition within agriculture that provided subject matter for iconic works by Danish Golden Age artists such as Johan Thomas Lundbye, a painter to whom Philipsen relates directly in other works.<sup id=\"footnote-36\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"36\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_5277\" data-sup-value=\"Thomas Lederballe: \u2018Philipsen og Impressionismen\u2019 in <em>Philipsen og Impressionismen<\/em>, Ordrupgaard 2001, p. 13. As regards the Danish Golden Age artists\u2019 efforts to keep the commons in art despite the reforms, see Gry Hedin: \u2018Art, agriculture and colonialism \u2013 Revisiting 19th Century Danish Landscape Painting in Museums\u2019 in Art and Empire: Imperialism and Aesthetic Practices, 1800-1950, Routledge: Companion to Art Series. Ed.: Alice M. R. Price &amp; Emily C. Burns (under publication).\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_5277\">36<\/a><\/sup> Perhaps the painting can be seen as a humorous retort to the changes brought about by new agricultural policies where the commons became sites devoted to pleasure rather than utility. By virtue of its ambiguity, the painting invites active engagement and empathy from audiences who, at the museum or exhibition, bring to bear their own experiences from the Deer Park.<\/p>\n<h2>When production animals return our gaze<\/h2>\n<p>The narrative in Otto Bache\u2019s <em>Driving Cows out of the Cowhouse <\/em><strong>[Fig. 5]<\/strong> is rather more straightforward<em>. <\/em>A man walks at the front and another raises a stick at the back while a motley crowd of at least twenty-seven cows and a bull are driven to the left and into the scene. Some are hesitant, others cavorting. The sun is rising, shining palely through the haze, and according to the second part of the original title, it is a \u2018Late October Morning\u2019. But what kind of cattle husbandry is Bache depicting here, and how does it connect with his choice of expressing himself on a vast canvas measuring more than 2 x 3 metres? The painting is signed 1885, the same year it was bought by the national gallery of Denmark, whose former rooms at Christiansborg Palace had perished in a fire the year before. Bache took a gamble that paid off: the large work found a buyer.<sup id=\"footnote-37\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"37\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_5277\" data-sup-value=\"According to Peter Christiansen, the work was created out of an urge to depict this particular subject and, despite the expensively sized canvas, was not a commission. Peter Christiansen: <em>Otto Bache: Malerier, Studier og Tegninger, <\/em>Copenhagen 1928, p. 46\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_5277\">37<\/a><\/sup><\/p>\n<figure id=\"attachment_5251\" aria-describedby=\"caption-attachment-5251\" style=\"width: 2560px\" class=\"wp-caption aligncenter\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"wp-image-5251 size-full\" src=\"https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/wp-content\/uploads\/2024\/03\/Koeerne-drives-ud-af-stalden-scaled.jpg\" alt=\"Otto Bache, K\u00f8erne drives ud af stalden, 1885, olie p\u00e5 l\u00e6rred, 205 x 315 cm. K\u00f8bt 1885. SMK, KMS1239\" width=\"2560\" height=\"1668\" srcset=\"https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/wp-content\/uploads\/2024\/03\/Koeerne-drives-ud-af-stalden-scaled.jpg 2560w, https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/wp-content\/uploads\/2024\/03\/Koeerne-drives-ud-af-stalden-380x248.jpg 380w, https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/wp-content\/uploads\/2024\/03\/Koeerne-drives-ud-af-stalden-1658x1080.jpg 1658w, https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/wp-content\/uploads\/2024\/03\/Koeerne-drives-ud-af-stalden-768x500.jpg 768w, https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/wp-content\/uploads\/2024\/03\/Koeerne-drives-ud-af-stalden-1536x1001.jpg 1536w, https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/wp-content\/uploads\/2024\/03\/Koeerne-drives-ud-af-stalden-2048x1334.jpg 2048w\" sizes=\"auto, (max-width: 2560px) 100vw, 2560px\" \/><figcaption id=\"caption-attachment-5251\" class=\"wp-caption-text\"><strong>Fig. 5.<\/strong>Otto Bache, <em>Driving Cows out of the Cowhouse<\/em>, 1885. Oil on canvas, 205 x 315 cm. Acquired 1885. SMK, KMS1239<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n<p>The scale of the painting is not alone in being ambitious; so too is the size of the herd of cows. This is no ordinary farm: in the 1880s, herd boys were generally responsible for six to eight cows.<sup id=\"footnote-38\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"38\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_5277\" data-sup-value=\"The number of cows shows that Bache must have visited one of the larger herds at the time. For example, in 1881 the average herd in the Holtung parish on Stevns numbered 8.1 heads of cattle. S.P. Jensen: \u2018Landbrugets systemskifte 1870-1914 belyst gennem dagb\u00f8ger og regnskaber fra en enkelt g\u00e5rd\u2019 in <em>Bol og by, Landbohistorisk tidsskrift, <\/em>vol. 1, no. 2, 1985, p. 65 ( <a href=https:\/\/tidsskrift.dk\/bola\/article\/view\/26153 target=_blank rel=noopener>https:\/\/tidsskrift.dk\/bola\/article\/view\/26153<\/a>).\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_5277\">38<\/a><\/sup> Clearly we are dealing here with one of the larger farms that contributed to driving the development towards cows bred specifically for high-fat milk.<sup id=\"footnote-39\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"39\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_5277\" data-sup-value=\"Rasmussen 1988, p. 335\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_5277\">39<\/a><\/sup> Such farms often had small-scale dairies of their own. This development was not conditioned by what happened in Denmark. According to <em>Det danske landbrugs historie <\/em>(The History of Danish Agriculture)<em>, <\/em>the way cattle was kept was affected by the fact that grain prices dropped from the end of the 1870s when grain products from fields established on the prairies of North America flooded the Danish market, helped along by easy and cheap transport via railways and steamships. As the price of animal products did not fall correspondingly, Denmark chose to buy up foreign grain for feed and supplement it with palm and coconut cakes as well as cottonseed cakes in order to boost the fat content of the milk and thus the quality of the butter.<sup id=\"footnote-40\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"40\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_5277\" data-sup-value=\"Rasmussen 1988, p. 320; Westermann and Goldschmidt 1895, p. 119\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_5277\">40<\/a><\/sup> The farms now became businesses with expenses for purchased feed materials that might eat up 30\u201340% of the income received from the sale of the produce.<sup id=\"footnote-41\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"41\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_5277\" data-sup-value=\"S.P. Jensen 1985, p. 90\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_5277\">41<\/a><\/sup><\/p>\n<p>Bache\u2019s cows are very likely to have been a result of this global development, which increased the number of cattle in Denmark while at the same time creating a new type of cattle and fostering a different view of them. Breeding was now done specifically with the aim of creating specialised dairy breeds. The cows depicted here have just been milked, their udders hanging limply. However, they are not producing milk for the household and are not handled individually, but as a herd. The roughness inherent in the raised stick shows us how this everyday action is carried out through force rather than cooperation <strong>[Fig. 6]<\/strong>. A shift is taking place as regards the empathetic view of the cow: one product is colonising other relationships and values, as Bellacasa would put it.<sup id=\"footnote-42\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"42\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_5277\" data-sup-value=\"Bellacasa 2015, p. 699\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_5277\">42<\/a><\/sup><\/p>\n<figure id=\"attachment_5259\" aria-describedby=\"caption-attachment-5259\" style=\"width: 380px\" class=\"wp-caption alignleft\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"wp-image-5259 size-medium\" src=\"https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/wp-content\/uploads\/2024\/03\/Udsnit_Koeerne-drives-ud-af-stalden-380x353.jpg\" alt=\"Otto Bache, K\u00f8erne drives ud af stalden (detalje), 1885, olie p\u00e5 l\u00e6rred, 205 x 315 cm. K\u00f8bt 1885. SMK, KMS1239\" width=\"380\" height=\"353\" srcset=\"https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/wp-content\/uploads\/2024\/03\/Udsnit_Koeerne-drives-ud-af-stalden-380x353.jpg 380w, https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/wp-content\/uploads\/2024\/03\/Udsnit_Koeerne-drives-ud-af-stalden-768x713.jpg 768w, https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/wp-content\/uploads\/2024\/03\/Udsnit_Koeerne-drives-ud-af-stalden.jpg 1014w\" sizes=\"auto, (max-width: 380px) 100vw, 380px\" \/><figcaption id=\"caption-attachment-5259\" class=\"wp-caption-text\"><strong>Fig. 6. <\/strong>Otto Bache, <em>Driving Cows out of the Cowhouse <\/em>(detail), 1885<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n<p>Bache has chosen to focus on this precise theme. Several fearful bovine eyes look out at him, not least those of the cow with the white head and brown ears. Its body has been painted in great detail, as if the painter were portraying a peer. The animal turns towards him, but it also seems as if \u2013 with open ears, eyes, mouth and nostrils \u2013 it takes in the rest of the world. The empathetic Alice Neel might say that it reflects what the world has done to it. According to art historian Sigurd M\u00fcller, Bache met \u2018each animal as an individual that demanded being recognised as an independent character, and he always succeeds in getting the viewer to recognise this demand\u2019.<sup id=\"footnote-43\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"43\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_5277\" data-sup-value=\"Jesper Svenningsen: \u2018I \u00f8jenh\u00f8jde med dyrene\u2019 in <em>Dansk kunst i 100 \u00e5r: 100 malerier fra det 19. \u00e5rhundrede,<\/em> Den Hirschsprungske Samling 2011, p. 126\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_5277\">43<\/a><\/sup><\/p>\n<p>With his monumental depiction of cows, Bache posits himself in the middle of the general development towards larger and more specialised farms that took place when the drop in grain prices brought about a crisis. He also raises questions. Why this crisis and this response to it? One might continue this train of thought: Why did the farms become so dependent on the sale of products \u2013 couldn\u2019t they just be self-sufficient? Did farmers need to make payments on loans taken out when brothers and sisters had to be bought out when the farm changed hands from one generation to the next, or did they need to pay high taxes to the very state that bought Bache\u2019s painting and received vast revenues from agriculture around this time? Did the farms opt to become industrialised in order to assert themselves and gain political influence, or were the farmers simply concerned with progress for the sake of progress?<sup id=\"footnote-44\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"44\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_5277\" data-sup-value=\"In this respect it is interesting to consult sources that investigate the conditions on a single farm, such as Jensen 1985\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_5277\">44<\/a><\/sup> These are questions that are only rarely touched on when agricultural history is written, unless individual farms are addressed. Yet they are interesting questions, and artists can contribute points based on visits to specific individual farms. Manors and smaller farms obviously faced different conditions, yet shared similar dynamics. Bache, who had grown up in Copenhagen in modest circumstances, mainly visited the big farms,<sup id=\"footnote-45\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"45\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_5277\" data-sup-value=\"Hanne Pedersen: <em>Otto Bache: 1839\u20131927<\/em>, R\u00f8nneb\u00e6ksholm 2009, p. 22\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_5277\">45<\/a><\/sup> but by showing the darker aspects of large-scale farming and sharing his observations on the loss of empathy in dealing with the animals, he outlines a dilemma that applied to small and large farms alike.<\/p>\n<p>Niels Pedersen Mols was a smallholder\u2019s son from Grumstrup outside Aarhus, and as such had close ties to agriculture. He depicts another side of the reality faced by production animals in <em>Beet Lifting<\/em> from 1886 <strong>[Fig. 7]<\/strong>, which became his breakthrough picture. Here we find an atmosphere of equality and cooperation between the two bullocks and the man who picks up the fodder beets while a little boy looks on with a whip in his hand. The boy and man are both faceless, a stark contrast to the central focal point of the picture: the bullock on the left, placed in the centre of the picture, looking out towards the viewer. Unlike the other bullock it has raised its head from the fodder beet tops it is munching.<\/p>\n<figure id=\"attachment_5257\" aria-describedby=\"caption-attachment-5257\" style=\"width: 2560px\" class=\"wp-caption aligncenter\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"wp-image-5257 size-full\" src=\"https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/wp-content\/uploads\/2024\/03\/Roeoptagning-scaled.jpg\" alt=\"N.P. Mols, Roeoptagning, 1886. 157 x 204. K\u00f8bt 1888. SMK, KMS1320\" width=\"2560\" height=\"1971\" srcset=\"https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/wp-content\/uploads\/2024\/03\/Roeoptagning-scaled.jpg 2560w, https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/wp-content\/uploads\/2024\/03\/Roeoptagning-380x293.jpg 380w, https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/wp-content\/uploads\/2024\/03\/Roeoptagning-1403x1080.jpg 1403w, https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/wp-content\/uploads\/2024\/03\/Roeoptagning-768x591.jpg 768w, https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/wp-content\/uploads\/2024\/03\/Roeoptagning-1536x1183.jpg 1536w, https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/wp-content\/uploads\/2024\/03\/Roeoptagning-2048x1577.jpg 2048w\" sizes=\"auto, (max-width: 2560px) 100vw, 2560px\" \/><figcaption id=\"caption-attachment-5257\" class=\"wp-caption-text\"><strong>Fig. 7.<\/strong>N.P. Mols, <em>Beet Lifting<\/em>, 1886. Oil on canvas, 157 x 204. Acquired 1888. SMK, KMS1320<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n<p>The two crucial elements that Mols brings together in this picture are the bullocks and the fodder beets, each of which has its own story. The cultivation of fodder beets used for feed grew in scope in Denmark in the 1880s, but it was a labour-intensive crop: in addition to harvesting, it required ploughing, sowing, thinning and weeding. However, fodder beets provided more than twice the feed energy compared to grain, and with fodder beets you could feed the cattle from the beginning of October until well into May.<sup id=\"footnote-46\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"46\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_5277\" data-sup-value=\"S.P. Jensen 1985, p. 92\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_5277\">46<\/a><\/sup> According to <em>Landmandsbogen<\/em>, fodder beets were preferable to natural pastures: under normal conditions grass could only briefly match the benefits of an abundant feed of fodder beets in the \u2018fattening of cattle\u2019.<sup id=\"footnote-47\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"47\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_5277\" data-sup-value=\"Westermann and Goldschmidt 1895, pp. 102, 105\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_5277\">47<\/a><\/sup> In Mols\u2019s picture, the fodder beets are plentiful, big and splendid, and the little boy is well dressed.<\/p>\n<p>While the fodder beets point towards recent developments in agriculture, the bullocks reflect a centuries-old practice in West Jutland. Mols painted the scene at Nissum Fjord, which is well situated for the West Jutland road that had been used for centuries to drive cattle that was to be shipped from Esbjerg to England or traded in cities such as Hamburg. Such trade made West Jutland a centre of commerce rather than the hinterland it has sometimes been perceived as.<sup id=\"footnote-48\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"48\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_5277\" data-sup-value=\"P. Jessen: <em>Husdyrbruget 1881<\/em>, <em>Tidsskrift for Land\u00f8konomi<\/em>, vol. 64, 1882, p. 42 (<a href=https:\/\/tidsskrift.dk\/tidsskriftlandoekonomi\/article\/view\/97462 target=_blank rel=noopener>https:\/\/tidsskrift.dk\/tidsskriftlandoekonomi\/article\/view\/97462<\/a>); Esben Graugaard: <em>Nordvestjyske b\u00f8nder som kreaturhandlere i Nords\u00f8rummet: studie i netv\u00e6rket omkring en regional kultur- og driftsform o. 1788-1914<\/em>, Syddansk Universitetsforlag 2009\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_5277\">48<\/a><\/sup> The two well-nourished bullocks served a dual function as draft animals and marketable beef cattle. Their raw strength is offset by the gentle expression that bullocks often have, being castrated bulls, and Mols has captured this precisely. The point is further emphasised by the bullock\u2019s gaze being placed in the centre of the picture. In 1908, the animals\u2019 expression prompted one reviewer to describe the bullocks as \u2018teddy bears\u2019 in <em>Illustreret Tidende<\/em> (Illustrated News), while in 1901\u20137 the art historian Francis Beckett stated, rather condescendingly, how Mols has \u2018preserved a childlike love for the animals and a childlike understanding of them\u2019. Even so, Beckett also believed that \u00a0\u2018the famous bullock head in <em>Beet Lifting<\/em> is distinguished not only by the fineness of the form and drawing, but also by the irresistibly kind, friendly look in the eyes, and this sense of doughty kindness communicates itself to the viewer\u2019.<a href=\"#_ftnref4\" name=\"_ftn4\"><\/a><sup id=\"footnote-49\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"49\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_5277\" data-sup-value=\"\u2018N.P. Mols-udstilling\u2019 in <em>Illustreret Tidende<\/em>, no. 20, 1908, p. 314. Francis Beckett: \u2018Vor Tids Malerkunst\u2019 in Karl Madsen, <em>Kunstens Historie i Danmark<\/em>, Copenhagen 1901\u20131907, p. 400 (<a href=https:\/\/archive.org\/details\/kunstenshistorie00mads\/page\/356\/mode\/2up target=_blank rel=noopener>https:\/\/archive.org\/details\/kunstenshistorie00mads\/page\/356\/mode\/2up<\/a>).\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_5277\">49<\/a><\/sup> Although Beckett thus partially offsets the condescension inherent in his analysis of the artist\u2019s childlike qualities, it is interesting to note that the critic does not notice the aspects of contemporary relevance and enterprise, nor does he pay any heed to the historically important trade in bullocks that had made West Jutland an international centre. The two monumental works by Bache and Mols home in on the general development towards keeping larger herds of cattle, and Mols points to the changes this brought about in the landscape due to the new methods of feeding. Cattle were streamlined as part of an increasingly industrialised approach to agriculture, but cows and bullocks look back at us, and the relationship between humans and cattle is central to both works.<\/p>\n<h2>Diffuse landscapes of production<\/h2>\n<p>The rise in Danish cattle population is not visible in Julius Paulsen\u2019s <em>Landscape near Kolding, Jutland, at <\/em><em>Sunset<\/em> from 1896 <strong>[Fig. 8]<\/strong>. Paulsen paints using his typical, slightly blurred brushstrokes, and spotting the cows is difficult. There is just one or two to be seen, their presence hinted at by indistinct brown smudges close to the first hedge <strong>[Fig. 9]<\/strong>. Perhaps they are not even there at all. Even so, cattle \u2013 being central agents in Danish agriculture \u2013 helped create this landscape: over centuries, their manure made the fields fertile. Also, by prompting the cultivation of grain, turnips and other crops used to feed animals in their barns, the cows contributed to creating the monochrome, uniform surfaces emphasised by Paulsen.<\/p>\n<figure id=\"attachment_5346\" aria-describedby=\"caption-attachment-5346\" style=\"width: 2560px\" class=\"wp-caption aligncenter\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"wp-image-5346 size-full\" src=\"https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/wp-content\/uploads\/2015\/04\/KMS1551-scaled.jpg\" alt=\"kms1551\" width=\"2560\" height=\"1728\" srcset=\"https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/wp-content\/uploads\/2015\/04\/KMS1551-scaled.jpg 2560w, https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/wp-content\/uploads\/2015\/04\/KMS1551-380x256.jpg 380w, https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/wp-content\/uploads\/2015\/04\/KMS1551-1600x1080.jpg 1600w, https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/wp-content\/uploads\/2015\/04\/KMS1551-768x518.jpg 768w, https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/wp-content\/uploads\/2015\/04\/KMS1551-1536x1037.jpg 1536w, https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/wp-content\/uploads\/2015\/04\/KMS1551-2048x1382.jpg 2048w\" sizes=\"auto, (max-width: 2560px) 100vw, 2560px\" \/><figcaption id=\"caption-attachment-5346\" class=\"wp-caption-text\"><strong>Fig. 8. <\/strong>Julius Paulsen, <em>Landscape <\/em><em>near<\/em><em> Kolding<\/em><em>, Jutland, at <\/em><em>Sunset<\/em>, 1896. Oil on canvas, 37 x 53 cm. Acquired 1897. SMK, KMS1551<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n<p>When considering the developments from 1860 until 1912, one finds that despite the conversion to animal husbandry and the substantial imports of grain, farmers did not grow any less grain in Denmark. The share of cultivated area used for monocultures remained stable.<sup id=\"footnote-50\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"50\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_5277\" data-sup-value=\"Rasmussen 1988, p. 281\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_5277\">50<\/a><\/sup> However, Paulsen is vague on this issue, perhaps even disinterested. He shows us hazy shimmers of green and gold rather than plants, and it is difficult to determine at what time of year he ventured into this landscape. Even the foreground is diffuse and lifeless. Indeed, the key aspect of this painting may be the fact that no one looks back at us. Neither humans, plants nor animals. Even the air seems empty. Paulsen is utterly alone with his mood and atmosphere. He may feel something but is alone in feeling it. He thus works with the diffuse and subtle power that Mitchell identifies when describing what landscape painting can and cannot do.<\/p>\n<figure id=\"attachment_5352\" aria-describedby=\"caption-attachment-5352\" style=\"width: 380px\" class=\"wp-caption alignright\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"wp-image-5352 size-medium\" src=\"https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/wp-content\/uploads\/2015\/04\/KMS1551_beskaaret3-380x274.jpg\" alt=\"Fig. 9. Julius Paulsen, Landskab ved Kolding mod solnedgang (detalje), 1896\" width=\"380\" height=\"274\" srcset=\"https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/wp-content\/uploads\/2015\/04\/KMS1551_beskaaret3-380x274.jpg 380w, https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/wp-content\/uploads\/2015\/04\/KMS1551_beskaaret3.jpg 450w\" sizes=\"auto, (max-width: 380px) 100vw, 380px\" \/><figcaption id=\"caption-attachment-5352\" class=\"wp-caption-text\"><strong>Fig. 9.<\/strong> Julius Paulsen, <em>Landscape <\/em><em>near<\/em><em> Kolding<\/em><em>, Jutland, at <\/em><em>Sunset<\/em> (detail), 1896<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n<p>Interestingly, the only figure that really stands out in Paulsen\u2019s landscape is the mill. We even find an extra one on the horizon, placed exactly in the centre axis of the image. Mills were agriculture\u2019s most conspicuous industrial buildings at the time. The erection of mills, new barns and stables were a sure sign of the industrialisation of agriculture. Between 1840 and 1897, the number of watermills and windmills in Denmark grew from 1700 to 2800.<sup id=\"footnote-51\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"51\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_5277\" data-sup-value=\" Lise Andersen: \u2018Tr\u00e6k af dansk m\u00f8llebyggeris historie\u2019, Nordjyllands Historiske Museum 2011 (<a href=https:\/\/web.archive.org\/web\/20131110145956\/http:\/\/moelleforum.dk\/index.php\/det-teknologiske-gennembrud target=_blank rel=noopener>https:\/\/web.archive.org\/web\/20131110145956\/http:\/\/moelleforum.dk\/index.php\/det-teknologiske-gennembrud<\/a>)\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_5277\">51<\/a><\/sup> By showing us the mill and the clearly demarcated fields, Paulsen presents us with a landscape where man has left clear traces. Through his diffuse gaze, he overlooks the potential presence of other actors in order to focus on his own agency \u2013 and that of his own species.<\/p>\n<h2>Art as a laboratory for the future<\/h2>\n<p>If we look closely at the landscape paintings from 1880\u20131900, it is clear that the artists present us with different takes on living and not-so-living landscapes. As curators at the museums, we have a responsibility to show the breadth and scope of such landscapes when we arrange exhibitions and hangs, and to show how the relationships with the world presented by the artists are pertinent to our time. The artists display great variation in terms of how they viewed their surroundings: some ignored or overlooked different forms of life and agency, others emphasised them. In Skovgaard\u2019s painting we see the interaction of many forms of life and agency: here the cow becomes a point of entry for immersing oneself in a landscape full of life. We see a cow deprived of its herd and its direct relationship with humans, but at the same time it orients itself \u2013 and thus also us as viewers \u2013 towards a landscape full of life. Skovgaard\u2019s work gives us an important angle of approach in our efforts to understand our relationship with the cow and the landscape. The cow is not only there for us: we are in this together, and the interaction is not necessarily free from requirements and the need for adaptation from both sides.<\/p>\n<p>Therkildsen tackles some of the same issues with his cow on the loose, but by way of his depiction of the cow\u2019s owner, emphasis is placed on the relationship between man and cow, despite the richness of different species in the meadow. Turning to Philipsen, we find ourselves in a separate league. Despite the realism of the light falling upon the autumn forest and the artist\u2019s personal background as a tenant of a farm, the cows seem strangely out of place. At a time when cattle were increasingly being moved inside into barns, his picture moves them to the forest to act as stand-ins for us. At a time when these animals were increasingly perceived as soulless cogs in an industry, they are imbued with spirit and soul here as wanderers in the wood. However, the idealisation seems so caricatured that they should presumably be perceived as a parody of the anthropomorphising of animals.<\/p>\n<p>With Bache, we come face to face with stark reality. The cows no longer walk by themselves but must be driven along with raised sticks. They have been milked and fed, and now it is time for them to roam the pastures until the next milking and feeding. The large herd foreshadows the kind of large-scale operation so characteristic of the industrialised agriculture of our time. Here, the sheer number of cows erodes the observation of and empathy for the needs of the individual cow and its interaction with other forms of life. However, Bache does not show us a herd of identical individuals, but a motley crowd that responds differently to human agency. Several of them even turn their gaze towards yet another human being, the artist.<\/p>\n<p>Mols shows us a landscape that has no cows but does have fodder beets and two bullocks whose powers of traction and muscle mass show us another aspect of how cattle was seen at the time. Like the calories from the butter which formed the focus of agricultural production at the time, traction is a form of fuel. As was the case in Bache\u2019s work, the gaze directed at us by Mols\u2019s bullock defies and punctures the de-souling inherent in such a way of viewing the world. And this is precisely what it is all about: orientation. The artists I have been studying address how we orient ourselves to and in the world. This also holds true of Julius Paulsen even if he does not use the cows as a gateway to empathy and orientation. Here the focus is neither on the cow nor on the other life forms found in the landscape, but on the human way of looking at it. Perhaps the lack of attention \u2013 so typical of the tradition continued by Paulsen \u2013 to the life around us is related to industrialisation\u2019s focus on the product and the de-souling of the individual animal and its complex surroundings.<\/p>\n<p>Risking oversimplification, one might suggest that the development seen in Danish agriculture in the 1880s and 1890s has certain parallels with the crisis in our relationship with the outside world we are all experiencing right now, manifesting itself in global climate and biodiversity crises. Even if such contentions are a stretch, it is important to examine the relationship between them: these crises concern not only the world around us, but also our imagination and ability to orientate ourselves. If we are to work actively with our imagination and our ability to genuinely see the many forms of life that create and make up the world around us, the depictions of cattle created during the two decades when the de-souling process took off in earnest can be part of an experiment \u2013 of a laboratory. In it, we can examine how we lost our bearings and the ability to see beyond our own agency and point of view.<\/p>\n<p>The landscapes with cows show how the artists of the 1880s and 1890s reflected on the developments taking place in their own day. Their works can be viewed in light of the shifts occurring in the general understanding of the world at that particular time, and we may ask what would have happened if we had been able to let the cow remain loose, coexisting more respectfully with it as a living being that shares its resources with us rather than as a resource that simply needs to be provided with other resources in the form of food? Would we then have had more points of entry for looking at the life around us, more than the one offered by the blurred landscapes created by Julius Paulsen and so many others, landscapes in which we mostly just see ourselves seeing?<\/p>\n<p>In our own present day, the focus is on the future rather than the past. The picture of the future outlined by the UN panel on climate change shapes the choices being made right now in terms of how we act in our environment. However, we must find not only new ways of acting, but also new ways of orienting ourselves in the world. The works addressed here can be curated on the basis of this very need. We can relate to the patterns of agency presented by the artists in a troubled territory of tethered cows and cows that are being driven yet look back at us. We are not presented with pastoral landscapes without Philipsen\u2019s wryly ironic bite. Apart from Paulsen\u2019s painting, which constitutes the only exception, the works of art have us stay within a problematic field that calls for us to orient ourselves and take a stand. In Paulsen\u2019s piece the cow is just an ambiguous blob, but in the other works the animals\u2019 poses and gazes give us the opportunity to assess what the world does to them and what they do to the world. Thus we are trained, as in the case of Alice Neel\u2019s portraits, in exercising and honing our empathy.<\/p>\n<p>According to the feminist art historian Maura Reilly, who is interested in how we can curate in activist ways, we need to count as we move through our art museums.<sup id=\"footnote-52\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"52\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_5277\" data-sup-value=\"Maura Reilly and L.R. Lippard: <em>Curatorial activism: towards an ethic of curating, <\/em>Thames &amp; Hudson 2018\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_5277\">52<\/a><\/sup> We must ensure that our collections offer broad representation of female and male artists, of different ethnic and religious backgrounds. Perhaps we should also begin counting cows and pay close attention to how cows and their landscapes are represented? We must ensure that we show landscapes where the artists let many forms of life come to the fore and have a voice, as well as works where we can, through the presentation and discussion of the art, ask how the production landscape is presented aesthetically and what that does to us. In an age of climate change and biodiversity crises where our relationship with the world around us must be reassessed, it is important to understand this part of our history. We need emotional renderings of the life forms with which we co-create the world, the ones with whom we entered into a renewed interaction when new developments took off. And we also need to look at the way we have created blurred landscapes out of the production landscapes with which we have surrounded ourselves. Many museum collections contain a wealth of positions that we can curate, and not least stories that we can tell, to open our imagination and point it towards a new reality.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>In a time of climate and biodiversity crises, where our relationship with our surroundings needs to be reassessed, landscape painting can help us revisit our history with the landscape. The article views the landscape as living and created by multiple species together by examining Danish landscape painting from 1880 to 1900 from the cow&#8217;s perspective.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":2,"featured_media":5266,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_acf_changed":false,"footnotes":""},"categories":[4],"tags":[145,131,149,148,150,147,132,146,133,134,135,136,137,45,138,151,139,140,141,142,143,144],"class_list":["post-5277","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","has-post-thumbnail","hentry","category-articles","tag-agriculture","tag-biodiversitetskrise-en","tag-biodiversity-crisis","tag-climate-crisis","tag-cows","tag-ecofeminism","tag-husdyrhold-en","tag-industrialisation","tag-industrialisering-en","tag-julius-paulsen-en","tag-klimakrise-en","tag-koeer-en","tag-landbrug-en","tag-landscape-painting","tag-landskabsmaleri-en","tag-livestock","tag-michael-therkildsen-en","tag-n-p-mols-en","tag-niels-skovgaard-en","tag-otto-bache-en","tag-oekofeminisme-en","tag-theodor-philipsen-en"],"acf":[],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO plugin v27.2 - https:\/\/yoast.com\/product\/yoast-seo-wordpress\/ -->\n<title>Cows Looking Back  Agriculture and Life in 19th Century Landscape Paintings - Perspective<\/title>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" href=\"https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/en\/koens-forsvinden-landbrug-og-liv-i-smks-landskabsmalerier\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"Cows Looking Back  Agriculture and Life in 19th Century Landscape Paintings - Perspective\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:description\" content=\"In a time of climate and biodiversity crises, where our relationship with our surroundings needs to be reassessed, landscape painting can help us revisit our history with the landscape. 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