Maritime Painting. Marine art or maritime art is any form of figurative art that portrays or draws its main inspiration from the sea.
   Maritime painting is a genre that depicts ships and the sea, a genre particularly strong from the 17th to 19th centuries. In practice the term often covers art showing shipping on rivers and estuaries, beach scenes and all art showing boats, without any rigid distinction-for practical reasons subjects that can be drawn or painted from dry land in fact feature strongly in the genre.
   Strictly speaking maritime art should always include some element of human seafaring, whereas marine art would also include pure seascapes with no human element, though this distinction may not be observed in practice. Ships and boats have been included in art from almost the earliest times, but marine art only began to become a distinct genre, with specialized artists, towards the end of the Middle Ages, mostly in the form of the ship portrait a type of work that is still popular and concentrates on depicting a single vessel.
   As landscape art emerged during the Renaissance, what might be called the marine landscape became a more important element in works, but pure seascapes were rare until later. Maritime art, especially marine painting-as a particular genre separate from landscape-really began with Dutch Golden Age painting in the 17th century.
   Marine painting was a major genre within
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