With the majority of the Netherlands at or below sea level, the Dutch have battled the seas for centuries.

Along the Dutch coast, systems of dykes and barriers have been built, some of which have been in place for centuries.

One of the most ambitious of these – the Zuiderzee works – was built in the early 20th century.

In the wake of devastating flooding in 1916, the Dutch government decided to close off the Zuiderzee sea with a system of dams and dikes, land reclamation and water drainage work, creating instead an inland sea.

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Massive construction works took place through the 1920s and 1930s to build this system – including the main dam – the Afsluitdijk – which opened in September 1933.

These construction works inspired artist Johan Hendrik van Mastenbroek whose paintings and sketches from the time capture the gigantic extent of the project.

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By Adrian Murphy, Europeana Foundation

Feature image: Werk aan de Blinde Geul, Johan Hendrik van Mastenbroek, Zuiderzeemuseum, CC BY-SA

The post Controlling the sea: painting the Zuiderzee engineering works first appeared on https://blog.europeana.eu.