Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

Een gehistorieerde familiegroep van Ferdinand Bol: twee fragmenten in Dordrecht en Lyon

View through CrossRef
AbstractFor some time it has been thought that Ferdinand Bol's Portrait of a couple in a landscape in the Dordrecht Museum (fig. i) is part of a larger picture (note 3). The cropping of the composition on all four sides and the somewhat nondescript posture of the figures have given rise to this suspicion, which is confirmed by the absence of cusping, revealed by X-rays, along the edges of the canvas. The description of a painting sold at an Amsterdam auction in 1804 makes it clear that the original composition was somewhat taller and considerably wider than the canvas now in Dordrecht, and that it also showed a shepherd resting on the left with some sheep and a ram (notes 3 and 4). A large part of the missing portion can be recognized in a picture in the museum at Lyon (fig. 2), which during restoration in 1989 / 90 was discovered to be a fragment (note 5). It bears a close stylistic resemblance to the Dordrecht painting and contains the shepherd described in 1804 with a number of sheep, some of them fragmented when the composition was cut up. This must have taken place some time between 1804 and 1841, when the Lyon fragment was bequeathed to the museum there as a work by Bol. This attribution is certainly correct, in spite of a short-lived attribution to Lambert Doomer (note 5). Together, the canvases in Lyon and Dordrecht measure only a little less than the work described in 1804. This leaves little room between the two fragments (fig. 3), and one may assume that most of the sheep whose muzzle is only just visible on the right in the Lyon picture was painted on the canvas at Dordrecht and over-painted there with a boulder when there was no more room for the truncated animal. It is quite likely that the original composition was no longer intact even in 1804, as may be inferred from the aforementioned absence of cusping in the Dordrecht fragment. Blankert has suggested that the Dordrecht picture might be identified with a portrait by Bol, described in 1681, of the woman who was later to become his second wife and her first husband in the roles of Isaac and Rebecca. The introduction of a third figure, however, rules out this idea. The figures may well play a biblical role, but it is not clear what characters they are impersonating, and one might also wonder whether they are perhaps portrayed in a 'pastoral' guise.
Title: Een gehistorieerde familiegroep van Ferdinand Bol: twee fragmenten in Dordrecht en Lyon
Description:
AbstractFor some time it has been thought that Ferdinand Bol's Portrait of a couple in a landscape in the Dordrecht Museum (fig.
i) is part of a larger picture (note 3).
The cropping of the composition on all four sides and the somewhat nondescript posture of the figures have given rise to this suspicion, which is confirmed by the absence of cusping, revealed by X-rays, along the edges of the canvas.
The description of a painting sold at an Amsterdam auction in 1804 makes it clear that the original composition was somewhat taller and considerably wider than the canvas now in Dordrecht, and that it also showed a shepherd resting on the left with some sheep and a ram (notes 3 and 4).
A large part of the missing portion can be recognized in a picture in the museum at Lyon (fig.
2), which during restoration in 1989 / 90 was discovered to be a fragment (note 5).
It bears a close stylistic resemblance to the Dordrecht painting and contains the shepherd described in 1804 with a number of sheep, some of them fragmented when the composition was cut up.
This must have taken place some time between 1804 and 1841, when the Lyon fragment was bequeathed to the museum there as a work by Bol.
This attribution is certainly correct, in spite of a short-lived attribution to Lambert Doomer (note 5).
Together, the canvases in Lyon and Dordrecht measure only a little less than the work described in 1804.
This leaves little room between the two fragments (fig.
3), and one may assume that most of the sheep whose muzzle is only just visible on the right in the Lyon picture was painted on the canvas at Dordrecht and over-painted there with a boulder when there was no more room for the truncated animal.
It is quite likely that the original composition was no longer intact even in 1804, as may be inferred from the aforementioned absence of cusping in the Dordrecht fragment.
Blankert has suggested that the Dordrecht picture might be identified with a portrait by Bol, described in 1681, of the woman who was later to become his second wife and her first husband in the roles of Isaac and Rebecca.
The introduction of a third figure, however, rules out this idea.
The figures may well play a biblical role, but it is not clear what characters they are impersonating, and one might also wonder whether they are perhaps portrayed in a 'pastoral' guise.

Related Results

Numéro 85 (nl) - février 2011
Numéro 85 (nl) - février 2011
Op initiatief van de federale overheid heeft het Belgische stelsel van werkloosheidsverze-kering sinds 2004 belangrijke veranderingen ondergaan. Het principe van de toekenning van ...
Repliek
Repliek
Ten eerste willen wij Eric van Elst bedanken voor zijn zorgvuldige recensie. Hij heeft met veel oog voor detail en een open instelling ons boek gelezen en een gebalanceerde besprek...
Het Qualitative Assessment and Review Instrument (QARI) ter ondersteuning van synthesen van kwalitatief onderzoek
Het Qualitative Assessment and Review Instrument (QARI) ter ondersteuning van synthesen van kwalitatief onderzoek
Het systematisch literatuuroverzicht (systematic review) heeft de laatste jaren enorm aan impact gewonnen in het evidence-based discours en wordt beschouwd als een belangrijke info...
<title>Karakteristiek Duurzaam Erfgoed in Gelderland<subtitle>KaDEr-stellingen
<title>Karakteristiek Duurzaam Erfgoed in Gelderland<subtitle>KaDEr-stellingen
Deze publicatie is een weerslag van de uitkomsten van het KaDEr-project (Karakteristiek Duurzaam Erfgoed) dat de TU Delft in opdracht van en in samenwerking met de Provincie Gelder...
Repliek
Repliek
Allereerst willen we opmerken dat het ons goed doet dat het boek goed (en kritisch) gelezen wordt, zoals nu door Ronald Hoekstra. We vinden het ook een uitstekend idee van KWALON o...
Cornelis Tromp’s trophies: The origins of a late portrait (1675-1676) by Ferdinand Bol
Cornelis Tromp’s trophies: The origins of a late portrait (1675-1676) by Ferdinand Bol
In 2018, Het Scheepvaartmuseum in Amsterdam acquired a portrait of Lieutenant-Admiral Cornelis Tromp (1629-1691), painted by Ferdinand Bol, from a private collection. Previously, t...
Verrekenprijzen bij handelingen tussen hoofdhuis en vaste inrichting
Verrekenprijzen bij handelingen tussen hoofdhuis en vaste inrichting
In het arrest Pizzarotti Italia heeft het HvJ in een Roemeense zaak beslist dat een nationale regeling op grond waarvan wel een verrekenprijscorrec tie van de winst van een vaste i...
De Russische inspiratie van Joris Van Severen. Deel 2
De Russische inspiratie van Joris Van Severen. Deel 2
In de oorlogsdagboeken van Joris Van Severen valt zijn belangstelling op voor bepaalde aspecten van de Russische cultuur, die weinig met elkaar gemeen hebben, met name Dostojevski ...

Back to Top