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Lot 21: Abraham Pietersz. van Calraet , Dordrecht 1642 - 1722 Portrait of a Horse in a Landscape oil on panel

Est: $80,000 USD - $120,000 USD
Sotheby'sNew York, NY, USJanuary 24, 2008

Item Overview

Description

inscribed lower left A . cuyp oil on panel

Dimensions

measurements note 18 7/8 by 23 1/4 in.; 48 by 59 cm.

Artist or Maker

Literature

J. Smith, A Catalogue Raisonné of the Works of the Most Eminent Dutch, Flemish and French Painters, London 1829-42, Supplement, no. 43 (as Cuyp);
C. Hofstede de Groot, A Catalogue Raisonné of the Works of the Most Eminent Dutch Painters, London 1908-1928, vol. 2, no. 574 (as Cuyp);
The Burlington Magazine, vol. xxv (June 1978), reproduced (as Cuyp);
A. D. Chong, Aelbert Cuyp and the Meanings of Landscape, unpublished dissertation, New York University 1992, p. 511, no. Calr. 15 (as Calraet);
N.T. Minty, In the Eye of the Beholder: Northern Paintings from the Collection of Henry H. Weldon, exhibition catalogue, New Orleans Museum of Art 1997, no. 12, reproduced ( as Calraet);
N.T. Minty and J. Spicer, An Eye for Detail: 17th-Century Dutch and Flemish Paintings from the Collection of Henry H. Weldon, exhibition catalogue, Walters Art Gallery, Baltimore, no. 11, reproduced (as Calraet).

Provenance

Auxbrevis, Namur and Liege, their coat of arms (which dates from the 17th century) in a red seal on the back of the panel;
Charles John West, Norwich;
His sale, London, Christie's, March 21, 1835, lot 53, for £34/13s, to Lockhart;
With Leonard Koetser Gallery, London, by 1972;
William M.J. Russell, Amsterdam, by 1977;
With Waterman Gallery, Amsterdam (date unknown)υ1
With Galerie J. Kraus, Paris, by 1978;
Fom whom purchased by the present collector circa 1978.

Notes

PROPERTY OF A PRIVATE COLLECTOR
Abraham van Calraet was a painter and woodcarver from Dordrecht. He is recorded in Houbraken as a painter of figures and fruit, but is known today primarily for his paintings of horses. For more than two centuries his work was virtually unknown, for it was subsumed into the oeuvre of his more famous colleague Aelbert Cuyp. Abraham Bredius first began to establish a body of work for Calraet when he distinguished a group of still lifes with the monogram A.C. traditionally considered as Cuyp and attributed them to Calraet.υ2 More recently, Alan Chong, in his monograph on Cuyp, attributed a group of 59 paintings to Abraham van Calraet, among them this Portrait of a Horse in a Landscape, but considered another seventeen as doubtful attributions.υ3 This portrait-like presentation is characteristic of Calraet, but unknown to Cuyp, whose horses are always in the company of people. We see the horse against a brightly lit sky, with cumulus clouds piled up behind him. He is shown turned three-quarters to the left, to best show his features. He is a type favored by Calraet, and we see him again in a painting of Horses in a Marsh Landscape in a private collection in the U.K.υ4 Rather than depicting the elegant mounts of the aristocracy Calraet favored somewhat heavier, working animals. The horse here is a sturdy animal, but alert and well-kept, his ears pricked up and coat gleaming in the sun. 1 A. Chong (see under Literature, p. 511) lists the Waterman Gallery last in his provenance for this painting, but according to information provided by the present owner, they purchased the work from Kraus.
2 A. Bredius, 'The Still-Life Painter Abram Calraet,' The Burlington Magazine, vol. xxx (1917), pp. 172-79.
3 See under Literature, pp. 502-529
4 See N.M Minty 1999 under Literature, p. 31, fig. 1.

Auction Details

Important Old Master Paintings Including European Works of Art

by
Sotheby's
January 24, 2008, 12:00 PM EST

1334 York Avenue, New York, NY, 10021, US