PAUL BRIL (BREDA 1553/4-1626 ROME)
PAUL BRIL (BREDA 1553/4-1626 ROME)
PAUL BRIL (BREDA 1553/4-1626 ROME)
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PROPERTY OF A EUROPEAN PRIVATE COLLECTOR
PAUL BRIL (BREDA 1553/4-1626 ROME)

Capriccio of the Via Appia Antica, near Rome, with the tomb of Cecilia Metella and the Claudian Aqueduct

Details
PAUL BRIL (BREDA 1553/4-1626 ROME)
Capriccio of the Via Appia Antica, near Rome, with the tomb of Cecilia Metella and the Claudian Aqueduct
oil on canvas
31 x 42 in. (78.8 x 106.7 cm.)
Provenance
(Possibly) W. Boswell & Son, Norwich, 1945.
Anonymous sale; Christie's, London, 6 July 2011, lot 205, where acquired by the present owner.

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Lot Essay

At the time of the 2011 sale, Francesca Cappelletti confirmed the attribution on the basis of photographs, noting the 'semplificazione spaziale della composizione, con l'isolamento del monumento e la inventività della scena di genere in primo piano' and suggesting a dating between 1615 and 1620. Prior to the sale, Luuk Pijl also confirmed the attribution of the staffage to Paul Bril in full, on the basis of first-hand examination, proposing that the landscape may have been executed by a studio assistant following the master's design. A version of the composition on panel (Nationalmuseum, Stockholm, inv. no. 493) was given by George Keyes to Willem van Nieulandt (Cornelis Vroom: Marine and Landscape Artist, II, Utrecht, 1975, pp. 221-222, under no. D17) and by Pijl to the workshop of Bril. A related drawing showing the Tomb of Cecilia Metella but not the activity in the foreground is given by Keyes to Cornelis Vroom (op. cit., no. D17, fig. 79), an attribution which has subsequently been called into question. Pijl notes that there are other late, unsigned works by Bril, for example the fine View of Bracciano (Art Gallery of South Australia, Adelaide), which functioned as an overdoor.

Bril retained an excellent command of his pictorial skills even in his seventies; for example, his Landscape with the Temptation of Christ, signed and dated 1626, was painted when the artist was 72 years old. The fascinating subject of the present work, which seems to be an unidentified game, may also reflect the growing interest in archaeology in the Early Modern period, with elegantly dressed gentlemen, clearly figures removed from the city, exploring the classical ruins of the Roman Campagna. The stately tower of the Tomb of Cecilia Metella, with its frieze of bulls' heads and garlands delicately picked out by the artist, was a feature which would also inspire Bril's friend and collaborator Jan Brueghel the Elder, who, like the elegant figures in the present picture, had visited the site, and in whose work an echo of the tower can be spotted countless times (see K. Ertz, Jan Brueghel der Ältere: Die Gemälde, II, Lingen, 2008-2010, nos. 268, 275, 277, 293 and others, fig. 268/1 a drawing after Matthijs Bril II, Paul Bril's brother).

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