PIETER DE HOOCH (ROTTERDAM 1629-IN OR AFTER 1679 AMSTERDAM)
PIETER DE HOOCH (ROTTERDAM 1629-IN OR AFTER 1679 AMSTERDAM)
PIETER DE HOOCH (ROTTERDAM 1629-IN OR AFTER 1679 AMSTERDAM)
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This lot is offered without reserve.
PIETER DE HOOCH (ROTTERDAM 1629-IN OR AFTER 1679 AMSTERDAM)

An interior scene with a woman playing a lute and a man playing a violin

细节
PIETER DE HOOCH (ROTTERDAM 1629-IN OR AFTER 1679 AMSTERDAM)
An interior scene with a woman playing a lute and a man playing a violin
oil on canvas
26 x 23 1/4 in. (66 x 59.1 cm.)
来源
Anonymous sale; Holland, 1788, no. 12 (f 20) (according to Hofstede de Groot).
(Probably) Anonymous sale; van der Schley a.o., Amsterdam, 10 June 1789, lot 12 (f 20 to Bogaard).
John Christoph Werther, Amsterdam; (†) his sale, van der Schley a.o., Amsterdam, 25 April 1792, lot 76.
Marquess of Stafford (according to Goldsmith sale).
Cardinal Fesch (1763-1839), Rome (according to Goldsmith sale).
Goldsmith, et al.; Phillips, London, 26 February 1856, lot 61.
with P. & D. Colnaghi, London, 1888.
Dr. Martin Schubart, Dresden, by 1889; (†) his sale, Hugo Helbing, Munich, 23 October 1899, lot 32, as on panel (9,100 DM to Bovery).
[Property of an Educational Institution]; Sotheby’s, New York, 15 January 1993, lot 106, where acquired by the present owner.
出版
A. Bredius, ‘Die Ausstellung alter Gemälde aus Sächsischem Privatbesitz in Leipzig’, Zeitschrift für bildende Kunst, I, 1890, p. 132.
F. Schlie, ‘Leipzig. Ausstellung älterer Meister aus sächsischem Privatbesitz’, Repertorium für Kunstwissenschaft, XIII, 1890, p. 159.
C. Hofstede de Groot, 'Proeve kritische beschrijving van het werk van Pieter de Hooch', Oud Holland, X, 1892, p. 185, no. 65.
T. Frimmel, ‘Die Galerie Schubart in München’, Zeitschrift für bildende Kunst, V, 1894, p. 218.
C. Hofstede de Groot, Sammlung Schubart, Munich, c. 1895, pp. 39-40, 52, illustrated.
C. Hofstede de Groot, A Catalogue Raisonné of the Works of the Most Eminent Dutch Painters of the Seventeenth Century, London, 1907, p. 522, no. 171.
C. Brière-Misme, ‘Tableaux inédits ou peu connus de Pieter de Hooch’, Gazette des Beaux-Arts, 1927, p. 276.
W.R. Valentiner, Pieter de Hooch, Stuttgart, 1929, p. 285, no. 137.
P.C. Sutton, Pieter de Hooch, Oxford, 1980, p. 114, no. 138, plate 141.
展览
Leipzig, Leipziger Kunstverein, Einundzwanzigste Sonderausstellung älter Meister aus sächsischem Privatbesitz, 1889, no. 118.
Munich, Königliche Kunstausstellungspalast, June-July 1895, no. 26.
注意事项
This lot is offered without reserve.

荣誉呈献

Jonquil O’Reilly
Jonquil O’Reilly Vice President, Specialist, Head of Sale

拍品专文

One of the most accomplished painters of domestic genre scenes during the Dutch Golden Age, Pieter de Hooch produced paintings that subtly respond to the expressive effects of light and successfully define complex spatial arrangements, often including views through a doorway or window. Following his move from Delft to Amsterdam in 1660, de Hooch gradually began to introduce musical parties, generally depicted as either family groups or male and female pairs, as a prominent subject in his painted oeuvre. Among the thirty or so paintings by de Hooch to treat this theme, the earliest of these is probably the Family Portrait Group Making Music of 1663 in the Cleveland Museum of Art (see Sutton, op. cit., no. 53).

Images of music-makers carried connotations of intimate, at times amorous, affections and were popular with a number of artists producing high-life genre paintings in the third quarter of the seventeenth century, among them Frans van Mieris, Caspar Netscher, Gerard ter Borch and Jan Steen. Instruction in music (and dance) was a standard feature of an upper-class education in the seventeenth-century. The lute-playing woman at the center of de Hooch’s composition is dressed in a costly white satin dress and casually sits on a table draped in an expensive Ottoman carpet. Here, a rather more drably dressed standing man plays a violin while gazing at a book of sheet music and is probably an instructor, rather than suitor. This point is perhaps made all the more clear by the woman’s wistful gaze away from the man, as if she is contemplating a lover who does not feature in the painting. A third figure, a page, is carrying a chair before a window framed by a pair of Corinthian pilasters which opens to the roofline of another building.

Sutton (op. cit.) rightly characterized this painting as ‘one of the artist’s most fanciful compositions’ (loc. cit.), noting that at left the architecture abruptly, and rather improbably, opens onto a river with a boat. He further drew a comparison between the posture of the woman in the present painting and another figure in more-or-less mirror image that appears in a painting of circa 1667-70 in the Taft Museum, Cincinnati (op. cit., no. 78).

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