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LOT 71

(-), Jan Hendrik Weissenbruch (1824-1903) Landschap in Noorden...

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Jan Hendrik Weissenbruch
(1824-1903)
Landschap in Noorden
Signed lower right
Watercolour and gouache on paper, 16.5 x 27 cm
Provenance:
- Kunsthandel Kupperman, Amsterdam, 1997 (inv.no. wh3)
- Private collection, the Netherlands
Exhibition:
Jacob Smitsmuseum, Mol, 30 March - 28 April 1996, no. 42
Note:
Jan Hendrik Weissenbruch, also known as Hendrik Johannes Weissenbruch, was a Dutch painter of the Hague School. Although Weissenbruch was trained in the Romantic tradition, in the 1860s he swifted towards a more realistic way of working, often ‘en plein air’. In the 1870s Weissenbruch started to execute more and more watercolours which were well suited for working en plein air. Soon the artist became noted as one of the most important watercolour artists of his time and contributed greatly to the fame that the Hague School would acquire in this art form. This present lot was created near Noorden and Nieuwkoop, where Weissenbruch often resided. It shows an almost archetype image of a Dutch polder landscape, where light, sky and clouds predominate. Weissenbruch painted this particular scene several times, on which he commented: “The sky in a painting, that’s a thing! A huge thing! Air and light are the great magicians. The sky determines the painting. Painters can never look at the sky enough.”
* Condition report available upon request

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Time, Location
12 Dec 2022
Netherlands, Amsterdam
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[ translate ]

Jan Hendrik Weissenbruch
(1824-1903)
Landschap in Noorden
Signed lower right
Watercolour and gouache on paper, 16.5 x 27 cm
Provenance:
- Kunsthandel Kupperman, Amsterdam, 1997 (inv.no. wh3)
- Private collection, the Netherlands
Exhibition:
Jacob Smitsmuseum, Mol, 30 March - 28 April 1996, no. 42
Note:
Jan Hendrik Weissenbruch, also known as Hendrik Johannes Weissenbruch, was a Dutch painter of the Hague School. Although Weissenbruch was trained in the Romantic tradition, in the 1860s he swifted towards a more realistic way of working, often ‘en plein air’. In the 1870s Weissenbruch started to execute more and more watercolours which were well suited for working en plein air. Soon the artist became noted as one of the most important watercolour artists of his time and contributed greatly to the fame that the Hague School would acquire in this art form. This present lot was created near Noorden and Nieuwkoop, where Weissenbruch often resided. It shows an almost archetype image of a Dutch polder landscape, where light, sky and clouds predominate. Weissenbruch painted this particular scene several times, on which he commented: “The sky in a painting, that’s a thing! A huge thing! Air and light are the great magicians. The sky determines the painting. Painters can never look at the sky enough.”
* Condition report available upon request

[ translate ]
Sale price
Unlock
Estimate
Unlock
Time, Location
12 Dec 2022
Netherlands, Amsterdam
Auction House
Unlock