His works are very rare, but most of them are easily recognised by his distinguished signature.
Works of Haarlem Period (1624-1628) The earliest works of de Hooch are dated around 1620, and were produced in Haarlem. File:Landscape with Travelers underneath a Dovecote, Monastery on the Right.png|
Landscape with Travelers underneath a Dovecote, Monastery on the Right, ca. 1625, panel File:(Charles Cornelisz. de Hooch, Landscape with Travelers underneath a Dovecote, Monastery on the Right.png|
Landscape with Travelers underneath a Dovecote, Monastery on the Right, 1620–28, canvas An example of one of those landscapes can be found in his
Landscape with Travelers underneath a Dovecote. In the centre of this panel there is a wooden dovecote build on three trees; a man in a red shirt and blue pants is standing on a ladder which is placed to it. On the right is a ruin of a castle with a stork's nest. In front of it there is a man accompanied by a dog. In the background there are trees surrounded by a clouded sky. This theme of a dovecote is also painted in a canvas painting in 1628, the year he moved to Utrecht, which de Hooch painted in Haarlem. At the bottom of the right is it signed "Chaerles dhooch" These two paintings of dovecotes look largely the same in terms of content, with the exception of the buildings in the right side. On the panel this is a ruin of a castle, while on the canvas this is a regular building. De Hooch was particularly admired for his ability to paint ruins, according to Ampzing.
Works of Utrecht Period (1628-1638) His Utrecht period is characterized by Italianate landscapes and grotto paintings. The seventeenth century Dutch Italianate grotto painting that is characteristic of De Hooch's Utrecht period owes its inception to Cornelis van Poelenbergh of Utrecht. Poelenbergh traveled to the south and, upon his return to Utrecht in the mid-1620s, he continued to depict Italianate landscapes featuring ruins and grottos. De Hooch was most likely involved in initiating this subject matter as an independent genre, along with other followers of Poelenbergh. De Hooch's Italianate landscapes can be clearly associated with those of Poelenburgh and Breenbergh, however it is not known whether he learned about Italianate motifs on a trip south or from Poelenburgh and Breenbergh after they returned to Holland from their own trips to south. De Hooch is known for his intriguing paintings of dramatically lit and spooky grottos which feature classical sculpture and architectural fragments.
Best known works • 'De duiventil - Charles DHooch', Panel 27x32, in Museum Kunstliefde in Utrecht • 'De grot - Charles D. Hooch f.' Panel, 53x79, in
Fredensborg Palace in Kopenhagen • 'De Catacomben, panel 68x93, in the collection Prince Charles d'Arenberg in Brussel An interesting case are two landscapes with ruins in
Suermondt-Ludwig-Museum of Aken (nr 67 and 68 of their 1883 catalogue), are both wrongly attributed to Pieter de Hooch (according to Dr.
Hofstede de Groot), because
Pieter never painted landscapes. Although
Arnold Houbraken thought that he was a pupil of
Nicolaes Berchem, it could be that these were Carel de Hooch's paintings. ==De Hooch family of artists==