A DUTCH VERRE EGLOMISE PICTURE OF THE COUNTRY HOUSE OUDERHOEK IN NIEUWERSLUIS
A DUTCH VERRE EGLOMISE PICTURE OF THE COUNTRY HOUSE OUDERHOEK IN NIEUWERSLUIS

BY JONAS ZEUNER (1727-1814), 1791

Details
A DUTCH VERRE EGLOMISE PICTURE OF THE COUNTRY HOUSE OUDERHOEK IN NIEUWERSLUIS
BY JONAS ZEUNER (1727-1814), 1791
The house depicted from the river Vecht with a tea cupola in the foreground, signed and dated lower right Zeuner. fec. 1791., in a later giltwood frame
53 cm. high x 71 cm. wide excl. frame
Provenance
Mak van Waay, Amsterdam, 8 March 1960, lot 491.
Literature
J. Sprenkels-ten Horn a.o., Jonas Zeuner 1727-1814, Zijn wereld weerspiegeld in zilver en goud, Abcoude, 1994, cat. nr. 94, pl. 94, p. 50
D. Stoopendaal, De Zegepraalende Vecht, Amsterdam, 1791, afb. 48, 49.

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Christiaan van Rechteren
Christiaan van Rechteren

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Lot Essay

Ouderhoek, was one of the first country houses to be built along the Vecht. The original building was erected in the early 17th century, and subsequently altered according to the fashion of the day. In 1717, Peter the Great visited Ouderhoek several times during has stay in Amsterdam. At Ouderhoek the Csar was served a pineapple for the first time - a rare fruit in those days! (A.J. van der Aa, Aardrijkskundig Woordenboek der Nederlanden, Gorinchem 1849, p. 676) The country house depicted by Zeuner was one of almost 200 such houses built by the wealthy Amsterdam patricians along the Vecht. These country houses were spread out along the riversides over a length of some 40 km. Ouderhoek was one of the many houses that was demolished in 1839 following the economic downturn in the 19th century.

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