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Aelbert Cuyp

Aelbert Jacobszoon Cuyp or Cuijp (Dutch pronunciation: [ˈaːlbər ˈcaːkɔbzoːŋ ˈkœyp];[a] 20 October 1620 – 15 November 1691) was one of the leading Dutch Golden Age painters, producing mainly landscapes. The most famous of a family of painters, the pupil of his father, Jacob Gerritszoon Cuyp (1594–1651/52),[1] he is especially known for his large views of Dutch riverside scenes in a golden early morning or late afternoon light. He was born and died in Dordrecht.

Biography edit

Known as the Dutch equivalent of Claude Lorrain, he inherited a considerable fortune. His family were all artists, with his uncle Benjamin and grandfather Gerrit being stained glass cartoon designers. Jacob Gerritszoon Cuyp, his father, was a portraitist.[2] Cuyp's father was his first teacher and they collaborated on many paintings throughout his lifetime.[3]

 
The Maas at Dordrecht, c. 1650, showing the Maas River in front of Cuyp's hometown of Dordrecht, National Gallery of Art

Little is known about Aelbert Cuyp's life. Even Arnold Houbraken, a noted historian of Dutch Golden Age paintings and the sole authority on Cuyp for the hundred years following his death, paints a very thin biographical picture.[4]

His period of activity as a painter is traditionally limited to the two decades between 1639 and 1660, fitting within the generally accepted limits of the Dutch Golden Age's most significant period, 1640–1665. He is known to have been married to Cornelia Bosman in 1658, a date coinciding so directly with the end of his productivity as a painter that it has been accepted that his marriage played a role in the end of his artistic career.[5]

The year after his marriage, Cuyp became the deacon of the reformed church. Houbraken recalled that Cuyp was a devout Calvinist and the fact that when he died, there were no paintings of other artists found in his home.[6]

Style edit

The development of Cuyp, who was trained as a landscape painter, may be roughly sketched in three phases based on the painters who most influenced him during that time and the subsequent artistic characteristics that are apparent in his paintings. Generally, Cuyp learned tone from the exceptionally prolific Jan van Goyen, light from Jan Both and form from his father, Jacob Gerritsz Cuyp.[7]

Cuyp's "van Goyen phase" can be placed approximately in the early 1640s. Cuyp probably first encountered a painting by van Goyen in 1640 when van Goyen was, as Stephen Reiss points, out "at the height of [his] powers".[7] This is noticeable in the comparison between two of Cuyp's landscape paintings inscribed 1639 where no properly formed style is apparent and the landscape backgrounds he painted two years later for two of his father's group portraits that are distinctly van Goyenesque. Cuyp took from van Goyen the straw yellow and light brown tones that are so apparent in his Dunes (1629) and the broken brush technique also very noticeable in that same work. This technique, a precursor to impressionism, is noted for the short brush strokes where the colors are not necessarily blended smoothly. In Cuyp's River Scene, Two Men Conversing (1641) both of these van Goyen-influenced stylistic elements are noticeable.

 
The Negro Page, circa 1652, Royal Collection

The next phase in the development of Cuyp's increasingly amalgamated style is due to the influence of Jan Both. In the mid-1640s Both, a native and resident of Utrecht, had just returned to his hometown from a trip to Rome. It is around this same time that Cuyp's style changed fundamentally. In Rome, Both had developed a new style of composition due, at least in part, to his interaction with Claude Lorrain. This new style was focused on changing the direction of light in the painting. Instead of the light being placed at right angles in relation to the line of vision, Both started moving it to a diagonal position from the back of the picture.[7]

In this new form of lighting, the artist (and viewer of the painting) faced the sun more or less contre-jour. Both, and subsequently Cuyp, used the advantages of this new lighting style to alter the sense of depth and luminosity possible in a painting. To make notice of these new capabilities, much use was made of elongated shadows. Cuyp was one of the first Dutch painters to appreciate this new leap forward in style and while his own Both-inspired phase was quite short (limited to the mid-1640s) he did, more than any other contemporary Dutch artist, maximize the full chromatic scale for sunsets and sunrises.[7]

 
Piping Shepherds, Metropolitan Museum of Art

Cuyp's third stylistic phase (which occurred throughout his career) is based on the influence of his father. While it is assumed that the younger Cuyp did work with his father initially to develop rudimentary talents, Aelbert became more focused on landscape paintings while Jacob was a portrait painter by profession. As has been mentioned and as will be explained in depth below, there are pieces where Aelbert provided the landscape background for his father's portraits. What is meant by stating that Aelbert learned from his father is that his eventual transition from a specifically landscape painter to the involvement of foreground figures is attributed to his interaction with his father Jacob. The evidence for Aelbert's evolution to foreground figure painter is in the production of some paintings from 1645 to 1650 featuring foreground animals that do not fit with Jacob's style.[8] Adding to the confusion regarding Aelbert's stylistic development and the problem of attribution is of course the fact that Jacob's style was not stagnant either. Their converging styles make it difficult to exactly understand the influences each had on the other, although it is clear enough to say that Aelbert started representing large scale forms (something he had not done previously) and placing animals as the focus of his paintings (something that was specific to him).

Paintings edit

Sunlight in his paintings rakes across the panel, accentuating small bits of detail in the golden light. In large, atmospheric panoramas of the countryside, the highlights on a blade of meadow grass, the mane of a tranquil horse, the horn of a dairy cow reclining by a stream, or the tip of a peasant's hat are all caught in a bath of yellow ocher light. The richly varnished medium refracts the rays of light like a jewel as it dissolves into numerous glazed layers. Cuyp's landscapes were based on reality and on his own invention of what an enchanting landscape should be.

 
Herd of Sheep at Pasture, 1650, Städelsches Kunstinstitut

Cuyp's drawings reveal him to be a draftsman of superior quality. Light-drenched washes of golden brown ink depict a distant view of the city of Dordrecht or Utrecht.

A Cuyp drawing may look like he intended it to be a finished work of art, but it was most likely taken back to the studio and used as a reference for his paintings. Often the same section of a sketch can be found in several different pictures.

Cuyp signed many of his works but rarely dated them, so that a chronology of his career has not been satisfactorily reassembled. A phenomenal number of paintings are ascribed to him, some of which are likely to be by other masters of the golden landscape, such as Abraham Calraet (1642–1722), whose initials A.C. may be mistaken for Cuyp's.

However, not everyone appreciates his work and River Landscape (1660), despite being widely regarded as amongst his best work, has been described as having "chocolate box blandness".[9]

At the Madrid's Thyssen-Bornemisza Museum most likely, the sole Cuyp's painting in Spanish public collections can be seen, a Landscape with a sunset ca. 1655 with animals.[10]

Misattribution of paintings edit

 
Cattle near a River, painting by an imitator of Cuyp (suspected 18th century).

In addition to the scarcely documented and confirmed biography of Cuyp's life, and even more so than his amalgamated style from his three main influences, there are yet other factors that have led to the misattribution and confusion over Aelbert Cuyp's works for hundreds of years. His highly influenced style which incorporated Italianate lighting from Jan Both, broken brush technique and atonality from Jan van Goyen, and his ever-developing style from his father Jacob Gerritsz Cuyp was studied acutely by his most prominent follower, Abraham van Calraet. Calraet mimicked Cuyp's style, incorporating the same aspects, and produced similar landscapes to that of the latter. This made it quite difficult to tell whose paintings were whose. Adding to the confusion is the similar initials between the two and the inconsistent signing of paintings which were produced by Cuyp's studio.

Although Aelbert Cuyp signed many of his paintings with a script "A. Cuyp" insignia, many paintings were left unsigned (not to mention undated) after being painted, and so a similar signature was added later on, presumably by collectors who inherited or discovered the works. Furthermore, many possible Cuyp paintings were not signed but rather initialed "A. C." referring to his name. However, Abraham van Calraet could also have used the same initials to denote a painting. Although this is unlikely (as Calraet would likely have signed his paintings "A. v.C."), this brings up the question of how paintings were signed to show ownership. Most original Cuyp paintings were signed by him, and in the script manner in which his name was inscribed. This would denote that the painting was done almost entirely by him. Conversely, paintings which came out of his workshop that were not necessarily physically worked on by Cuyp but merely overseen by him technically, were marked with A.C. to show that it was his instruction which saw the paintings' completion. Cuyp's pupils and assistants often worked on paintings in his studio, and so most of the work of a painting could be done without Cuyp ever touching the canvas, but merely approving its finality. Hence, the initialed inscription rather than a signature.[11]

Common among the mislabeled works are all of the reasons identified for misattributing Cuyp's works: the lack of biography and chronology of his works made it difficult to discern when paintings were created (making it difficult to pinpoint an artist); contentious signatures added to historians' confusion as to who actually painted the works; and the collaborations and influences by different painters makes it hard to justify that a painting is genuinely that of Aelbert Cuyp; and finally, accurate identification is made extremely difficult by the fact that this same style was copied (rather accurately) by his predecessor. As it turns out, even the historians and expert researchers have been fooled and forced to reassess their conclusions over "Cuyp's" paintings over the years.

Later life edit

After he married Cornelia Boschman in 1658, the number of works produced by him declined almost to nothing. This may have been because his wife was a very religious woman and a not very big patron of the arts. It could also be that he became more active in the church under his wife's guidance. He was also active as deacon and elder of the Reformed Church.[12]

Legacy edit

Though long lacking a modern biography, and with the chronology of his works rather unclear, his style emerged from various influences and makes his works distinctive, although his collaborations with his father and works by his imitators often make attributions uncertain. His follower Abraham van Calraet represents a particular problem, and the signatures on paintings are not to be relied on. The Rijksmuseum has reattributed many works to other painters; Abraham van Calraet does not even appear in a Museum catalogue until 1926, and even then he was not given his own entry.[13]

Gallery edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ In isolation, Aelbert and Jacobszoon are pronounced [ˈaːlbərt] and [ˈjaːkɔbzoːn], respectively.

References edit

  1. ^ Pioch, Nicholas (14 July 2002). "Cuyp". WebMuseum, Paris. from the original on 29 April 2007. Retrieved 19 April 2007.
  2. ^ "Aelbert Cuyp". The Vincent van Gogh Gallery. Retrieved 14 April 2007.
  3. ^ Adams, Ann Jensen; Sutton, Peter C. (June 1992). "Masters of Dutch 17th-Century Landscape Painting". The Art Bulletin. 74 (2): 334. doi:10.2307/3045877. ISSN 0004-3079. JSTOR 3045877.
  4. ^ Wheelock, Arthur K., Jr., Aelbert Cuyp, (2001), p. 16
  5. ^ Reiss (1975), p. 7
  6. ^ Arnold Houbraken, De groote schouburgh der nederlantsche konstschilders en schilderessen, (1718–1721), p. 198.
  7. ^ a b c d Reiss (1975), p. 8.
  8. ^ Reiss (1975), p. 9.
  9. ^ Kelly, Ned (18 March 2002). . New Statesman. Archived from the original on 30 September 2007. Retrieved 19 April 2007.
  10. ^ "Landscape with a Sunset". Museo Nacional Thyssen-Bornemisza. Retrieved 8 November 2019.
  11. ^ Reiss (1975), p. 10.
  12. ^ . National Gallery of Art. 2007. Archived from the original on 9 May 2008. Retrieved 25 October 2007.
  13. ^ Riemsdijk, (1926), p. 47.

Further reading edit

  • Stephen Reiss (1975). Aelbert Cuyp. Zwemmer. ISBN 9780302027356.
  • Gerard Hoet; Catalogus of Naamlyst van Schildereyen; The Hague; 1752; vol. 2
  • Jean-Baptiste Descamps; La Vie des peintres flamands, allemands et hollandois; Paris; [n. pub.]; 1753–1763; vol. 2, p. 80
  • George Agar-Ellis; Catalogue of the principal pictures in Flanders and Holland, 1822; London; W. Nicol; 1826; p. 70
  • John Smith; A Catalogue Raisonne of the Works of the most Eminent Dutch, Flemish and French Painters Part III Containing the Lives and Works of Anthony Van Dyck and David Teniers; London; Smith and Son; 1831; vol. 5, no. 13
  • Willem Bürger; Trésors d'Art exposés à Manchester en 1857; Paris; Jules Renouard et Cie; 1857; p. 266
  • Jan F. van Someren; Oude Kunst in Nederland: Etsen van Willem Steelink; Amsterdam; [n. pub.]; 1890; pl. 3
  • Emile Michel, Une famille d'artistes hollandais: Les Cuyps, Gazette des Beaux-Arts, 34, 1892, 5–23, 107–17, 224–38; p. 227
  • Cornelis Hofstede de Groot; A Catalogue Raisonné of the Works of the Most Eminent Dutch Painters of the Seventeenth Century. Vols 1–4 [1907-1927]; Bishops Stortford; Chadwick Healey; 1976; vol. 2, no. 36
  • Simon van Gijn; Dordracum Illustratum; Dordrecht; De Dordrechtsche Drukkerij-en Uitgevers-Maatschappij; 1908; no. 325
  • Eugène Fromentin; The Masters of Past Time: Dutch and Flemish Painting from Van Eyck to Rembrandt [1948]; Oxford; Phaidon Press; 1981; p. 149
  • Sir Francis Watson, The Art Collections at Waddesdon Manor I: The Paintings, Apollo, 69, June 1959, 172–182; p. 181
  • Christopher White, Dutch and Flemish Paintings at Waddesdon Manor, Gazette des Beaux-Arts, 54, August 1959, 67–74; p. 68
  • Ellis Waterhouse, Anthony Blunt; Paintings: The James A. de Rothschild Collection at Waddesdon Manor; Fribourg; Office du Livre, The National Trust; 1967; pp. 134–135, cat. no. 55
  • J Q Van Regteren Altena, Review of The James A. de Rothschild Collection at Waddesdon Manor. Ellis Waterhouse, Paintings., Oud Holland, 85, 1970, 59–61; p. 60
  • S. Reiss; Aelbert Cuyp; London; Zwemmer; 1975; p. 146, no. 106
  • Margarita Russell, Aelbert Cuyp. The Maas at Dordrecht: The Great Assembly of the Dutch Armed Forces, June–July 1646., Dutch Crossing, 40, 1990, 31–82; pp. 34–35
  • Ben Broos; Great Dutch Paintings from America; Zwolle; Waanders Publishers; 1990; p. 215
  • Alan Chong; Aelbert Cuyp and the Meanings of Landscape; New York University; 1992; p. 408, cat. no. 160; as 'The gathering of the fleet at Dordrecht'
  • Arthur K Wheelock Jr.; Dutch Paintings of the Seventeenth Century: The National Gallery of Art's Systematic Catalogue; Washington, D.C.; National Gallery of Art; 1995; p. 129
  • Ruud Priem, The "Most Excellent Collection" of Lucretia Johanna van Winter: The Years 1809–22, with a Catalogue of the Works Purchased, Simiolus: Netherlands Quarterly for the History of Art, 25, 1997, 103–196; p. 118, fig. 19
  • Ruud Priem, Catalogue of Old Master Paintings Acquired by Lucretia Johanna van Winter, 1809–22, Simiolus: Netherlands Quarterly for the History of Art, 25, 1997, 197–230; p. 219, no. 38
  • Arthur K Wheelock Jr.; Aelbert Cuyp; National Gallery of Art, Washington, 7 October 2001 – 13 January 2002; National Gallery, London, 13 February – 12 May 2002; Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam, 7 June – 1 September 2002; New York; Thames & Hudson; 2001; pp. 146–149
  • Wouter Th. Kloek; Aelbert Cuyp: Land, Water, Light; Amsterdam, Zwolle; Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam, Waanders Publishers; 2002; p. 30
  • Michael Hall; Waddesdon Manor: The Heritage of a Rothschild House; New York; Harry N Abrams Inc; 2002; p. 88, ill.
  • Ariane van Suchtelen, Arthur K Wheelock Jr.; Dutch Cityscapes of the Golden Age; Royal Picture Gallery Mauritshuis, The Hague, 11 October 2008 – 11 January 2009; National Gallery of Art, Washington, 1 February – 3 May 2009; Zwolle, Washington, D.C., The Hague; Waanders Publishers, National Gallery of Art, Royal Picture Gallery Mauritshuis, The Hague; 2008; p. 104, ill.
  • Peter Hecht; 125 Jaar openbaar kunstbezit : met steun van de Vereniging Rembrandt; Zwolle; Waanders Publishers; 2008; pp. 12, 14, 209 n. 98
  • Arthur K Wheelock Jr.; "Aelbert Cuyp/The Maas at Dordrecht/c. 1650", Dutch Paintings of the Seventeenth Century, NGA Online Editions, accessed December 07, 2014.; Washington, D.C.; National Gallery of Art; 2012
  • Crowe, Joseph Archer (1911). "Cuyp s.v. Albert Cuyp" . In Chisholm, Hugh (ed.). Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 7 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. pp. 677–678.

External links edit

  Media related to Aelbert Cuyp at Wikimedia Commons

  • 81 artworks by or after Aelbert Cuyp at the Art UK site
  • Works and literature on Aelbert Cuyp
  • Dutch and Flemish paintings from the Hermitage, an exhibition catalog from The Metropolitan Museum of Art (fully available online as PDF), which contains material on Cuyp (cat. no. 7)
  • Aelbert Cuyp's artworks at Waddesdon Manor

aelbert, cuyp, street, market, amsterdam, albert, cuyp, market, aelbert, jacobszoon, cuyp, cuijp, dutch, pronunciation, ˈaːlbər, ˈcaːkɔbzoːŋ, ˈkœyp, october, 1620, november, 1691, leading, dutch, golden, painters, producing, mainly, landscapes, most, famous, f. For the street market in Amsterdam see Albert Cuyp Market Aelbert Jacobszoon Cuyp or Cuijp Dutch pronunciation ˈaːlber ˈcaːkɔbzoːŋ ˈkœyp a 20 October 1620 15 November 1691 was one of the leading Dutch Golden Age painters producing mainly landscapes The most famous of a family of painters the pupil of his father Jacob Gerritszoon Cuyp 1594 1651 52 1 he is especially known for his large views of Dutch riverside scenes in a golden early morning or late afternoon light He was born and died in Dordrecht Contents 1 Biography 2 Style 3 Paintings 4 Misattribution of paintings 5 Later life 6 Legacy 7 Gallery 8 Notes 9 References 10 Further reading 11 External linksBiography editKnown as the Dutch equivalent of Claude Lorrain he inherited a considerable fortune His family were all artists with his uncle Benjamin and grandfather Gerrit being stained glass cartoon designers Jacob Gerritszoon Cuyp his father was a portraitist 2 Cuyp s father was his first teacher and they collaborated on many paintings throughout his lifetime 3 nbsp The Maas at Dordrecht c 1650 showing the Maas River in front of Cuyp s hometown of Dordrecht National Gallery of ArtLittle is known about Aelbert Cuyp s life Even Arnold Houbraken a noted historian of Dutch Golden Age paintings and the sole authority on Cuyp for the hundred years following his death paints a very thin biographical picture 4 His period of activity as a painter is traditionally limited to the two decades between 1639 and 1660 fitting within the generally accepted limits of the Dutch Golden Age s most significant period 1640 1665 He is known to have been married to Cornelia Bosman in 1658 a date coinciding so directly with the end of his productivity as a painter that it has been accepted that his marriage played a role in the end of his artistic career 5 The year after his marriage Cuyp became the deacon of the reformed church Houbraken recalled that Cuyp was a devout Calvinist and the fact that when he died there were no paintings of other artists found in his home 6 Style editThe development of Cuyp who was trained as a landscape painter may be roughly sketched in three phases based on the painters who most influenced him during that time and the subsequent artistic characteristics that are apparent in his paintings Generally Cuyp learned tone from the exceptionally prolific Jan van Goyen light from Jan Both and form from his father Jacob Gerritsz Cuyp 7 Cuyp s van Goyen phase can be placed approximately in the early 1640s Cuyp probably first encountered a painting by van Goyen in 1640 when van Goyen was as Stephen Reiss points out at the height of his powers 7 This is noticeable in the comparison between two of Cuyp s landscape paintings inscribed 1639 where no properly formed style is apparent and the landscape backgrounds he painted two years later for two of his father s group portraits that are distinctly van Goyenesque Cuyp took from van Goyen the straw yellow and light brown tones that are so apparent in his Dunes 1629 and the broken brush technique also very noticeable in that same work This technique a precursor to impressionism is noted for the short brush strokes where the colors are not necessarily blended smoothly In Cuyp s River Scene Two Men Conversing 1641 both of these van Goyen influenced stylistic elements are noticeable nbsp The Negro Page circa 1652 Royal CollectionThe next phase in the development of Cuyp s increasingly amalgamated style is due to the influence of Jan Both In the mid 1640s Both a native and resident of Utrecht had just returned to his hometown from a trip to Rome It is around this same time that Cuyp s style changed fundamentally In Rome Both had developed a new style of composition due at least in part to his interaction with Claude Lorrain This new style was focused on changing the direction of light in the painting Instead of the light being placed at right angles in relation to the line of vision Both started moving it to a diagonal position from the back of the picture 7 In this new form of lighting the artist and viewer of the painting faced the sun more or less contre jour Both and subsequently Cuyp used the advantages of this new lighting style to alter the sense of depth and luminosity possible in a painting To make notice of these new capabilities much use was made of elongated shadows Cuyp was one of the first Dutch painters to appreciate this new leap forward in style and while his own Both inspired phase was quite short limited to the mid 1640s he did more than any other contemporary Dutch artist maximize the full chromatic scale for sunsets and sunrises 7 nbsp Piping Shepherds Metropolitan Museum of ArtCuyp s third stylistic phase which occurred throughout his career is based on the influence of his father While it is assumed that the younger Cuyp did work with his father initially to develop rudimentary talents Aelbert became more focused on landscape paintings while Jacob was a portrait painter by profession As has been mentioned and as will be explained in depth below there are pieces where Aelbert provided the landscape background for his father s portraits What is meant by stating that Aelbert learned from his father is that his eventual transition from a specifically landscape painter to the involvement of foreground figures is attributed to his interaction with his father Jacob The evidence for Aelbert s evolution to foreground figure painter is in the production of some paintings from 1645 to 1650 featuring foreground animals that do not fit with Jacob s style 8 Adding to the confusion regarding Aelbert s stylistic development and the problem of attribution is of course the fact that Jacob s style was not stagnant either Their converging styles make it difficult to exactly understand the influences each had on the other although it is clear enough to say that Aelbert started representing large scale forms something he had not done previously and placing animals as the focus of his paintings something that was specific to him Paintings editSunlight in his paintings rakes across the panel accentuating small bits of detail in the golden light In large atmospheric panoramas of the countryside the highlights on a blade of meadow grass the mane of a tranquil horse the horn of a dairy cow reclining by a stream or the tip of a peasant s hat are all caught in a bath of yellow ocher light The richly varnished medium refracts the rays of light like a jewel as it dissolves into numerous glazed layers Cuyp s landscapes were based on reality and on his own invention of what an enchanting landscape should be nbsp Herd of Sheep at Pasture 1650 Stadelsches KunstinstitutCuyp s drawings reveal him to be a draftsman of superior quality Light drenched washes of golden brown ink depict a distant view of the city of Dordrecht or Utrecht A Cuyp drawing may look like he intended it to be a finished work of art but it was most likely taken back to the studio and used as a reference for his paintings Often the same section of a sketch can be found in several different pictures Cuyp signed many of his works but rarely dated them so that a chronology of his career has not been satisfactorily reassembled A phenomenal number of paintings are ascribed to him some of which are likely to be by other masters of the golden landscape such as Abraham Calraet 1642 1722 whose initials A C may be mistaken for Cuyp s However not everyone appreciates his work and River Landscape 1660 despite being widely regarded as amongst his best work has been described as having chocolate box blandness 9 At the Madrid s Thyssen Bornemisza Museum most likely the sole Cuyp s painting in Spanish public collections can be seen a Landscape with a sunset ca 1655 with animals 10 Misattribution of paintings edit nbsp Cattle near a River painting by an imitator of Cuyp suspected 18th century In addition to the scarcely documented and confirmed biography of Cuyp s life and even more so than his amalgamated style from his three main influences there are yet other factors that have led to the misattribution and confusion over Aelbert Cuyp s works for hundreds of years His highly influenced style which incorporated Italianate lighting from Jan Both broken brush technique and atonality from Jan van Goyen and his ever developing style from his father Jacob Gerritsz Cuyp was studied acutely by his most prominent follower Abraham van Calraet Calraet mimicked Cuyp s style incorporating the same aspects and produced similar landscapes to that of the latter This made it quite difficult to tell whose paintings were whose Adding to the confusion is the similar initials between the two and the inconsistent signing of paintings which were produced by Cuyp s studio Although Aelbert Cuyp signed many of his paintings with a script A Cuyp insignia many paintings were left unsigned not to mention undated after being painted and so a similar signature was added later on presumably by collectors who inherited or discovered the works Furthermore many possible Cuyp paintings were not signed but rather initialed A C referring to his name However Abraham van Calraet could also have used the same initials to denote a painting Although this is unlikely as Calraet would likely have signed his paintings A v C this brings up the question of how paintings were signed to show ownership Most original Cuyp paintings were signed by him and in the script manner in which his name was inscribed This would denote that the painting was done almost entirely by him Conversely paintings which came out of his workshop that were not necessarily physically worked on by Cuyp but merely overseen by him technically were marked with A C to show that it was his instruction which saw the paintings completion Cuyp s pupils and assistants often worked on paintings in his studio and so most of the work of a painting could be done without Cuyp ever touching the canvas but merely approving its finality Hence the initialed inscription rather than a signature 11 Common among the mislabeled works are all of the reasons identified for misattributing Cuyp s works the lack of biography and chronology of his works made it difficult to discern when paintings were created making it difficult to pinpoint an artist contentious signatures added to historians confusion as to who actually painted the works and the collaborations and influences by different painters makes it hard to justify that a painting is genuinely that of Aelbert Cuyp and finally accurate identification is made extremely difficult by the fact that this same style was copied rather accurately by his predecessor As it turns out even the historians and expert researchers have been fooled and forced to reassess their conclusions over Cuyp s paintings over the years Later life editAfter he married Cornelia Boschman in 1658 the number of works produced by him declined almost to nothing This may have been because his wife was a very religious woman and a not very big patron of the arts It could also be that he became more active in the church under his wife s guidance He was also active as deacon and elder of the Reformed Church 12 Legacy editThough long lacking a modern biography and with the chronology of his works rather unclear his style emerged from various influences and makes his works distinctive although his collaborations with his father and works by his imitators often make attributions uncertain His follower Abraham van Calraet represents a particular problem and the signatures on paintings are not to be relied on The Rijksmuseum has reattributed many works to other painters Abraham van Calraet does not even appear in a Museum catalogue until 1926 and even then he was not given his own entry 13 Gallery editAelbert Cuyp s paintings nbsp Landscape with cattle c 1639 1649 National Gallery of Victoria nbsp A View of the Maas at Dordrecht about 1645 1646 J Paul Getty Museum nbsp Herdsmen with Cows c 1645 Dulwich Picture Gallery nbsp Cattle near the Maas with Dordrecht in the distance nbsp Avenue at Meerdervoort nbsp The Mussel Eater c 1650 Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen nbsp Cows in a River c 1654 nbsp Landscape with a Horseman Figures and Cattle c 1655 Waddesdon Manor nbsp A Landing Party on the Maas at Dordrecht 1655 1660 Waddesdon Manor The other canvas that appears to show an event in the end stages of the Eighty Years War is now in the National Gallery of Art Washington nbsp Travelers in Hilly Countryside c 1650 Cleveland Museum of Art nbsp Equestrian Portrait of Cornelis and Michiel Pompe van Meerdervoort with Their Tutor and Coachman before 1653 Metropolitan Museum of ArtNotes edit In isolation Aelbert and Jacobszoon are pronounced ˈaːlbert and ˈjaːkɔbzoːn respectively References edit Pioch Nicholas 14 July 2002 Cuyp WebMuseum Paris Archived from the original on 29 April 2007 Retrieved 19 April 2007 Aelbert Cuyp The Vincent van Gogh Gallery Retrieved 14 April 2007 Adams Ann Jensen Sutton Peter C June 1992 Masters of Dutch 17th Century Landscape Painting The Art Bulletin 74 2 334 doi 10 2307 3045877 ISSN 0004 3079 JSTOR 3045877 Wheelock Arthur K Jr Aelbert Cuyp 2001 p 16 Reiss 1975 p 7 Arnold Houbraken De groote schouburgh der nederlantsche konstschilders en schilderessen 1718 1721 p 198 a b c d Reiss 1975 p 8 Reiss 1975 p 9 Kelly Ned 18 March 2002 Cuyp cake New Statesman Archived from the original on 30 September 2007 Retrieved 19 April 2007 Landscape with a Sunset Museo Nacional Thyssen Bornemisza Retrieved 8 November 2019 Reiss 1975 p 10 Aelbert Cuyp National Gallery of Art 2007 Archived from the original on 9 May 2008 Retrieved 25 October 2007 Riemsdijk 1926 p 47 Further reading editStephen Reiss 1975 Aelbert Cuyp Zwemmer ISBN 9780302027356 Gerard Hoet Catalogus of Naamlyst van Schildereyen The Hague 1752 vol 2 Jean Baptiste Descamps La Vie des peintres flamands allemands et hollandois Paris n pub 1753 1763 vol 2 p 80 George Agar Ellis Catalogue of the principal pictures in Flanders and Holland 1822 London W Nicol 1826 p 70 John Smith A Catalogue Raisonne of the Works of the most Eminent Dutch Flemish and French Painters Part III Containing the Lives and Works of Anthony Van Dyck and David Teniers London Smith and Son 1831 vol 5 no 13 Willem Burger Tresors d Art exposes a Manchester en 1857 Paris Jules Renouard et Cie 1857 p 266 Jan F van Someren Oude Kunst in Nederland Etsen van Willem Steelink Amsterdam n pub 1890 pl 3 Emile Michel Une famille d artistes hollandais Les Cuyps Gazette des Beaux Arts 34 1892 5 23 107 17 224 38 p 227 Cornelis Hofstede de Groot A Catalogue Raisonne of the Works of the Most Eminent Dutch Painters of the Seventeenth Century Vols 1 4 1907 1927 Bishops Stortford Chadwick Healey 1976 vol 2 no 36 Simon van Gijn Dordracum Illustratum Dordrecht De Dordrechtsche Drukkerij en Uitgevers Maatschappij 1908 no 325 Eugene Fromentin The Masters of Past Time Dutch and Flemish Painting from Van Eyck to Rembrandt 1948 Oxford Phaidon Press 1981 p 149 Sir Francis Watson The Art Collections at Waddesdon Manor I The Paintings Apollo 69 June 1959 172 182 p 181 Christopher White Dutch and Flemish Paintings at Waddesdon Manor Gazette des Beaux Arts 54 August 1959 67 74 p 68 Ellis Waterhouse Anthony Blunt Paintings The James A de Rothschild Collection at Waddesdon Manor Fribourg Office du Livre The National Trust 1967 pp 134 135 cat no 55 J Q Van Regteren Altena Review of The James A de Rothschild Collection at Waddesdon Manor Ellis Waterhouse Paintings Oud Holland 85 1970 59 61 p 60 S Reiss Aelbert Cuyp London Zwemmer 1975 p 146 no 106 Margarita Russell Aelbert Cuyp The Maas at Dordrecht The Great Assembly of the Dutch Armed Forces June July 1646 Dutch Crossing 40 1990 31 82 pp 34 35 Ben Broos Great Dutch Paintings from America Zwolle Waanders Publishers 1990 p 215 Alan Chong Aelbert Cuyp and the Meanings of Landscape New York University 1992 p 408 cat no 160 as The gathering of the fleet at Dordrecht Arthur K Wheelock Jr Dutch Paintings of the Seventeenth Century The National Gallery of Art s Systematic Catalogue Washington D C National Gallery of Art 1995 p 129 Ruud Priem The Most Excellent Collection of Lucretia Johanna van Winter The Years 1809 22 with a Catalogue of the Works Purchased Simiolus Netherlands Quarterly for the History of Art 25 1997 103 196 p 118 fig 19 Ruud Priem Catalogue of Old Master Paintings Acquired by Lucretia Johanna van Winter 1809 22 Simiolus Netherlands Quarterly for the History of Art 25 1997 197 230 p 219 no 38 Arthur K Wheelock Jr Aelbert Cuyp National Gallery of Art Washington 7 October 2001 13 January 2002 National Gallery London 13 February 12 May 2002 Rijksmuseum Amsterdam 7 June 1 September 2002 New York Thames amp Hudson 2001 pp 146 149 Wouter Th Kloek Aelbert Cuyp Land Water Light Amsterdam Zwolle Rijksmuseum Amsterdam Waanders Publishers 2002 p 30 Michael Hall Waddesdon Manor The Heritage of a Rothschild House New York Harry N Abrams Inc 2002 p 88 ill Ariane van Suchtelen Arthur K Wheelock Jr Dutch Cityscapes of the Golden Age Royal Picture Gallery Mauritshuis The Hague 11 October 2008 11 January 2009 National Gallery of Art Washington 1 February 3 May 2009 Zwolle Washington D C The Hague Waanders Publishers National Gallery of Art Royal Picture Gallery Mauritshuis The Hague 2008 p 104 ill Peter Hecht 125 Jaar openbaar kunstbezit met steun van de Vereniging Rembrandt Zwolle Waanders Publishers 2008 pp 12 14 209 n 98 Arthur K Wheelock Jr Aelbert Cuyp The Maas at Dordrecht c 1650 Dutch Paintings of the Seventeenth Century NGA Online Editions accessed December 07 2014 Washington D C National Gallery of Art 2012 Crowe Joseph Archer 1911 Cuyp s v Albert Cuyp In Chisholm Hugh ed Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 7 11th ed Cambridge University Press pp 677 678 External links edit nbsp Media related to Aelbert Cuyp at Wikimedia Commons 81 artworks by or after Aelbert Cuyp at the Art UK site Works and literature on Aelbert Cuyp Dutch and Flemish paintings from the Hermitage an exhibition catalog from The Metropolitan Museum of Art fully available online as PDF which contains material on Cuyp cat no 7 Aelbert Cuyp s artworks at Waddesdon Manor nbsp Wikisource has original text related to this article Century Magazine Volume 48 Issue 1 Old Dutch Masters Aelbert Cuyp Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Aelbert Cuyp amp oldid 1177164314, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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