David Teniers II (Antwerp 1610-1690 Brussels)
THE PROPERTY OF A LADY
David Teniers II (Antwerp 1610-1690 Brussels)

Saints Anthony Abbot and Paul of Thebes in a rocky landscape, a ruined castle on the hills beyond

Details
David Teniers II (Antwerp 1610-1690 Brussels)
Saints Anthony Abbot and Paul of Thebes in a rocky landscape, a ruined castle on the hills beyond
signed ‘D• TENIERS • F (lower centre)
oil on canvas
25 x 38 3/8 in. (63.5 x 97.5 cm.)
in a Continental, probably French, 18th century elaborately carved and pierced double-swept frame
Provenance
Acquired by Henry Temple, 2nd Viscount Palmerston (1739-1802), Broadlands, Hampshire, in Brussels, 1760 (£84), and by inheritance to his son,
Henry, 3rd Viscount Palmerston (1784-1865), by whom recorded at Broadlands, Hampshire, as in the Dressing Room ('Landscape with Rocks and Figures, Teniers', manuscript, List of Pictures and Marbles at Broadlands, 1807), and by inheritance to the following,
Edwina Ashley, Lady Louis Mountbatten, later Countess Mountbatten of Burma (1901-1960), by 1942.
with H. J. Spiller, London, where acquired on 24 November 1951 (£500).
Exhibited
Antwerp, Koninklijk Museum voor schonen Kunsten, David Teniers the Younger. Paintings. Drawings, 11 May-1 September 1991, no. 75.
Sale Room Notice
Please note that Dr. Margret Klinge dates the present picture to the early 1650s and not as stated in the printed catalogue.

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Lot Essay

Henry Temple inherited Broadlands, Hampshire, in 1757, the celebrated seat of the Palmerston dynasty, a Palladian mansion designed in stages by William Kent, Lancelot 'Capability' Brown and Henry Holland. From his coming of age in 1760 until his death in 1802 his house and collection were among his dominant interests. While he inherited a number of portraits, this painting was amongst his first purchases having been acquired in Brussels in 1760, and formed part of what was to become a vast collection of old masters (F. Russell, ‘A connoisseur’s taste. Paintings at Broadlands I’, Country Life, CLXXI, 1983, pp. 224-6). In 1791, the picture was framed in its present, richly carved frame. Unrecorded before its exhibition in 1991, Dr. Margret Klinge dates the picture to the early 1640s, the master’s mature Antwerp Period, about five years before the Temptation of Saint Anthony, now in the Gemäldegalerie, Dresden (inv. no. 1097; see David Teniers, op.cit., p. 134, no. 41). A very similar version of this composition with almost identical dimensions was offered at Bukowski, Stockholm, on 25 September 1929, lot 73 and again on 10 October 1971, lot 243.

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