Lucas van Valckenborch (Malines c. 1535-1597 Frankfurt) and 
Georg Flegel (Olmütz 1566-1638 Frankfurt-am-Main)
Lucas van Valckenborch (Malines c. 1535-1597 Frankfurt) and 
Georg Flegel (Olmütz 1566-1638 Frankfurt-am-Main)
Lucas van Valckenborch (Malines c. 1535-1597 Frankfurt) and 
Georg Flegel (Olmütz 1566-1638 Frankfurt-am-Main)
2 More
Lucas van Valckenborch (Malines c. 1535-1597 Frankfurt) and 
Georg Flegel (Olmütz 1566-1638 Frankfurt-am-Main)
5 More
Specifed lots (sold and unsold) marked with a fill… Read more
LUCAS VAN VALCKENBORCH (MALINES C. 1535-1597 FRANKFURT) AND GEORG FLEGEL (OLMÜTZ 1566-1638 FRANKFURT-AM-MAIN)

Allegory of Autumn: A fruit and vegetable stall above the Weinmarkt in Frankfurt

Details
LUCAS VAN VALCKENBORCH (MALINES C. 1535-1597 FRANKFURT) AND
GEORG FLEGEL (OLMÜTZ 1566-1638 FRANKFURT-AM-MAIN)
Allegory of Autumn: A fruit and vegetable stall above the Weinmarkt in Frankfurt
signed with initials and dated '.1594 / L / VV' (centre right)
oil on canvas
66 ¾ x 93 1/8 in. (169.6 x 236.6 cm.)
Provenance
(Possibly) Archduke Ernst of Austria, Governor of the Netherlands (1553-1595), Brussels, as being one of the series listed in his inventory as 'Vier grosze Stuck auf Lainwath die vier anni temporibus' (see Seifertová, 1974, op. cit.).
Prof. Dr. med. Alexander Haindorf (1784-1862), Gut Caldenhof, Hamm, and by descent to Dr Ernst-Theodor Loeb (1881-1964), Gut Caldenhof, Hamm.
with Galerie Stern, Düsseldorf, acquired from the above, January 1934 , and from whom acquired by the following,
Moritz Grüntal (1878-1956), Düsseldorf, from whom confiscated by the Nazi authorities in late 1936.
with Hans Bammann, Düsseldorf, from whom acquired in 1937 by the following,
Rheinisches Landesmuseum, Bonn (inv. no. 37.1.), from where restituted in 1950 to the following,
Moritz Grüntal (1878-1956), Vaduz.
H. Jochems, The Hague, by whom acquired in Zurich by 1962.
with Bode & Bode, The Hague, 1966.
with Johnny van Haeften, London, March 1996.
Roger Souvereyns (b. 1938); Christie's, London, 7 July 2000, lot 27, when acquired by the present owner.
Literature
W.J. Müller, 'Der Maler Georg Flegel und die Anfange des Stillebens', Schriften des Historischen Museums Frankfurt am Main, VIII, 1956, p. 88, pl. 4.
G.T. Faggin, 'Appunti, Estratto dalla Revista (Dirck de Vries)', Paragone, CLXV, September 1963, note 22.
A. Wied, 'Lucas van Valkenborch', Jahrbuch der Kunsthistorischen Sammlungen in Wien, LXVII, 1971, pp. 119 and 204, no. 53, fig. 142.
H. Seifertová, 'Tempores anni Lucas van Valkenborch', Umeni, XXII, 1974, pp. 326-327, fig. 9.
K. Wettengl, Die Mahlzeitenstilleben von Georg Flegel, PhD Thesis, Osnabrück, 1983, pp. 20, 22 and 28, fig. 6.
S. Segal, 'Georg Flegel as flower painter', Tableau, VII, 1984, p. 85, note 9.
A. Wied, Lucas und Marten van Valckenborch: das Gesamtwerk mit kritischem Oeuvrekatalog, Luca, 1990, pp. 28, 35, 40 and 166, no. 65, illustrated.
H. Seifertová, 'Georg and his compositional peculiarities', Bulletin of the National Gallery in Prague, I, 1991, pp. 44-45.
D. Freedberg and J. de Vries, eds., Art in History/History in Art: Studies in Seventeenth-Century Dutch Culture, Santa Monica, 1991, p. 53.
E.A. Honig, Painting and the Market in Early Modern Antwerp, New Haven and London, 1998, pp. 136-7, pl. 14.
Exhibited
Düsseldorf, Galerie Stern, Gemälde Alter Meister aus Rheinisch Westfälischem Besitz, 24 February-31 March 1934, no. 80.
Brussels, Musées Royaux des Beaux-Arts, Le Siècle de Brueghel: La peinture en Belgique au XVIe siècle, 27 September-24 November 1963, no. 223.
Frankfurt am Main, Historisches Museum, Georg Flegel, Stilleben, 18 December 1993-13 February 1994, no. 3.
Special Notice
Specifed lots (sold and unsold) marked with a filled square ( ¦ ) not collected from Christie’s, 8 King Street, London SW1Y 6QT by 5.00 pm on the day of the sale will, at our option, be removed to Crown Fine Art (details below). Christie’s will inform you if the lot has been sent ofsite. If the lot is transferred to Crown Fine Art, it will be available for collection from 12.00 pm on the second business day following the sale. Please call Christie’s Client Service 24 hours in advance to book a collection time at Crown Fine Art. All collections from Crown Fine Art will be by prebooked appointment only.
Sale Room Notice
The work is being offered for sale pursuant to a settlement agreement between the current owner and the Dr and Mrs Max Stern Foundation. This settlement agreement resolves any dispute over ownership of the work and title will pass to the successful bidder.

Please note that in addition to the provenance details listed in the catalogue, this lot was with Prof. Dr. med. Alexander Haindorf (1784-1862) and by descent to Dr Ernst-Theodor Loeb (1881-1964). The lot was acquired by Galerie Stern in January 1934, from whom acquired by Moritz Grüntal.

Brought to you by

Clementine Sinclair
Clementine Sinclair Senior Director, Head of Department

Lot Essay

Painted in Frankfurt in 1595, this is one of best surviving examples of Lucas van Valckenborch’s large-format market scenes, which became the mainstay of his artistic output in the last decade of his career. Boldly composed and executed on an impressive scale, it originally formed part of a set of Four Seasons, along with, according to Wied (op. cit., 1990, pp. 35-6), the Summer, dated 1592, now in the collection of Leopold von Sternberg at Častolovice (fig. 1). The allegories of Spring and Winter from the series are both lost.
Wied agrees with Seifertová (op. cit., 1974) that this series was most likely the one painted for Archduke Ernest of Austria. An inventory of 1595 lists among the Archduke’s paintings ‘Four large pieces on canvas of the four anni temporibus [seasons]’ attributed to ‘M. Lucas’ (I. Raband, ‘Collecting the Painted Netherlands: The Art Collection of Archduke Ernest of Austria in Brussels’, Collecting Nature, A. Gáldy and S. Heudecker, eds., Cambridge, 2014, p. 122). The Archduke, in fact, owned more than one series of paintings depicting the Months or the Seasons, including the famed cycle of six pictures by Pieter Bruegel the Elder and a set of twelve by Abel Grimmer.
Luca van Valckenborch painted as many as four cycles of large scale allegorical representations of the Seasons between 1592 and 1597, revolutionising the tradition of market scene painting, which had been pioneered by Pieter Aertsen and Joachim Beuckelaer in the middle of the century. In their works, religious scenes were normally incorporated into the backgrounds as a means of providing moralizing gloss on the activity in the foreground. By contrast, Valckenborch’s scenes are noteworthy for their synthesis of the foreground still-life elements and the background topographical landscape into a unified, wholly secular composition, with an emphasis on real-life commerce.
The contemporary setting for Autumn is the St Leonard’s Quay in Frankfurt, which also features in the background of an allegory of Winter, from a different series, painted in the same year (private collection). Valckenborch moved to Frankfurt from Linz in 1593 bringing his assistant Georg Flegel with him. Muller, in 1956, was first to identify the prominent role played by Flegel in Autumn, whose technical prowess is on full display in the superbly executed still-life details.

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