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Saturday, November 23, 2024 |
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Portrait by Dutch Artist Jan Lievens To Be Auctioned |
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Jan Lievens (1607 1674), Portrait of a young girl in profile.
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LONDON, ENGLAND.- A stunning portrait by Dutch artist Jan Lievens (1607 1674) is to be sold at Bonhams this winter. Portrait of a young girl in profile is expected to fetch between £300,000 500,000 at Bonhams Sale of Old Master Paintings on 6 December 2006 at 101 New Bond Street, London.
Considered a child prodigy of his time, Jan Lievens was apprenticed alongside Rembrandt van Rijn in the studio of Pieter Lastman, and the two artists worked closely together between 1625 and 1631. These early works show borrowings of composition and subject, and the two used such a similar technique that unsigned works from this period can be difficult to ascribe accurately. Constantin Huygens, one of the most notable patrons of the arts in the United Province, ranked the two artists together in his 1631 autobiography, when he referred to a pair of noble and young painters. Indeed, in comparing the two artists talents, Huygens went so far as to say that in some respects Lievens was better than Rembrandt due to his magnificent invention, daring subjects and greater designs.
Late in 1631 the two artists parted company, Rembrandt travelling to Amsterdam and Lievens to England. It was here, at the English court, where he came under the influence of Sir Anthony Van Dyck, whose Flemish baroque style he went on to employ in his later paintings. In 1644 Lievens moved to Amsterdam, where he lived and worked for the rest of his life, and gained an international reputation through his readiness to adapt to the prevailing baroque taste.
While history has tended to overlook Lievens as yet another Rembrandt follower, art historians have recently argued that his early work is equal to that of Rembrandt and that he was an innovatory force to be reckoned with in his own right. His emerging importance was made clear to the art market when in December 1990 Bonhams sold Lievenss Portrait of a boy in Persian dress for a world record hammer price of £530,000. This painting and the portrait to be offered by Bonhams in December have come from the Bett Collection, which was compiled in the 1920s by a connoisseur who chose to value quality over quantity at a time when many were doing the opposite.
This portrait is a fine and important example of Lievenss work, and we expect it to do extremely well at auction explains Andrew McKenzie, Director of Old Master Paintings at Bonhams. The beautifully preserved panel to be sold at Bonhams depicts a rosy-cheeked girl, captured in profile by a pool of golden light, and the mood is one of immense tranquility, evoking perfectly her state of quiet contemplation. The palate is subtle. The pale pink of her dress, which is reflected more strongly in her cheeks and her hair-band, complements the golden luminosity of her long, flowing hair. This painting is a true delight to look at and will doubtless be fought-over by collectors and enthusiasts alike.
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