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Jan van de Cappelle

Jan van de Cappelle (or Joannes / van der / Capelle in various combinations; 25 January 1626 (baptized) – 22 December 1679 (buried))[1] was a Dutch Golden Age painter of seascapes and winter landscapes, also notable as an industrialist and art collector. He is "now considered the outstanding marine painter of 17th century Holland".[2]

Jan van de Cappelle, by Gerbrand van den Eeckhout
Shipping in a Calm at Flushing with a States General Yacht Firing a Salute, 1649

He lived all his life in Amsterdam, and as well as working as an artist spent much, or most,[3] of his time helping to manage his father Franchoy's large dyeworks, which specialized in the expensive dye carmine, and which he eventually inherited in 1674. Presumably because of this dual career, there are fewer than 150 surviving paintings,[2] a relatively small number for the industrious painters of the Dutch Golden Age. His marine paintings usually show estuary or river scenes rather than the open sea, and the water is always very calm, allowing it to act as a mirror reflecting the cloud formations above; this effect was Cappelle's speciality.

Life edit

 
The Home Fleet Saluting the State Barge, 1650, a "parade" picture. 64 × 92.5 cm (25.20 × 36.42 in)

His father (1594–1674) was a cloth-dyer, his mother came from Rotterdam; they married in 1622 in Amsterdam. Joannes' baptism is recorded in the Nieuwe Kerk, Amsterdam on 25 January 1626.[4] He was described (by Gerbrand van den Eeckhout) as a self-taught artist, but probably received some form of training from Simon de Vlieger, whose style he copied or is closest to his early paintings, and perhaps other masters such as Willem van de Velde the Elder. He received the citizenship of Amsterdam on 24 July 1653, an essentially honorific ceremony for one of the city elite.[5] A few months before, on 2 February 1653, he had married Annetje Jansdr. Grotingh, the daughter of a bricklayer. Van de Cappelle was a very wealthy man who never needed to rely on his painting for his livelihood,[2] and it is not known if he joined the city's Guild of Saint Luke, or the separate "brotherhood of painters" founded in 1653.[6] Whether he sold his work, or how he did so, is unclear.

 
Winterlandscape, Rijksmuseum
 
A Calm, 1654

Abraham Bredius suggested Van de Cappelle was a friend of Rembrandt,[7] at whose insolvency sales in 1656 and 1658 he was a large buyer, and who painted portraits of him and his wife. It has been speculated that he may have used his business contacts to help obtain the commission for Rembrandt's last, and financially very useful, group portrait commission, the Syndics of the Drapers' Guild of 1662.[8]

His earliest dated painting is an important and already highly accomplished one from 1645, and only one is dated in the 1660s.[9] From this most authors assume he devoted his later years to his business, in which his brother Franchois also worked. In May 1661 he bought a house in the Koestraat,[10] near Nieuwmarkt, moving from the even more expensive Keizersgracht.[11][12] The house with a garden, next to a school, was sold by a son of Sweelinck, and in the deed of purchase van de Cappelle is simply called schilder (painter) and not a master painter.[13]

His wife predeceased him in 1677, and van de Cappelle himself was buried in the Nieuwe Kerk on 22 December 1679. He left seven children.[14] The inventory of his property at death has survived and is the main source of information about his impressive art collection. It took seven months to list all.[15] He left his children six houses, a country house south of Loenen on the river Vecht (Utrecht), a pleasure yacht, "44 bags of ducats", silk and bonds together valued at 92,720 guilders.[16] A lengthy list of the items from his splendid wardrobe was made, (including his violet stockings)[17] as well as a list of his large and important art collection.[14]

Works edit

 
A Calm, 1650–1655

The majority of his works are marine or river views, nearly always with several vessels, but he also left a number of small winter landscapes somewhat in the manner of Aert van der Neer;[18] these all seem to date between 1652 and 1654.[19] His seascapes (using the term loosely) may be large or small; the nine examples in the National Gallery, London, the largest group in a single collection, vary between 122 x 154.5 cm (NG 967: 48 x 61 inches) and 34.8 x 48.1 cm (NG 865: 14 x 19 inches).[20]

He had no interest in rough seas or cloudless skies,[21] showing large cloudy skies, with the horizon low, about 15-20% of the way up the vertical axis. The clouds are often mirrored in the dead calm water, although light ripples may be shown. As is often the case in Dutch seascapes, there is often a warship or "statenjacht" ("States yacht"), an official yacht used for transport, official salutes and other business. The edge of the composition often slices through vessels, leaving them half seen. Van de Cappelle painted many parade marine subjects, depicting "a formal gathering of ships for a ceremonial occasion".[2] Other paintings, mostly smaller and of less busy subjects, a type often called "calms", show "an all-pervading luminous atmosphere that softens all outlines and unifies forms and local colours",[2] or as Kenneth Clark puts it, "When sky was reflected on water, there was achieved that unity of luminous atmosphere which is ... the whole point of van de Capelle and van de Velde".[22]

In his early works he followed the muted palette of the "tonal school", but enlived with local highlights of bright colour, but moved in his later works to "a warmer golden tonality, exceptionally allowing himself a greater colouristic exuberance when setting the rosy glow of a sunset sky against water of a deep turquoise blue, as in the River Scene with Sailing Vessels (Rotterdam, Boymans–van Beuningen Museum)".[2] According to his leading scholar, Margarita Russell, "More than any other artist of his time, with the exception only of Rembrandt, van de Cappelle was a painter of light".[2]

Cappelle made a small number of etchings; only two signed ones of landscapes are now firmly attributed to him.[23] Fewer than twenty of the nearly 750 of his own drawings in the 1680 inventory have survived identifiably.[24]

Art collection edit

 
This painting by Frans Hals was formerly considered to be the lost portrait of Jan van de Cappelle
 
One of van de Cappelle's 500 Rembrandt drawings
 
Winter Landscape

He had one of the largest art collections of his day, with 192[25] paintings and over 7,000 drawings,[2] nearly all Dutch with a few Flemish works, and concentrating heavily on his own specialisms of marine painting and winter landscapes. He had portraits of himself by both Rembrandt (one of a pair with his wife) and Frans Hals, and he is the only person known to have been painted by both of the greatest Dutch portraitists.[26] However, if they survive the identity of both paintings has been lost. The Rembrandt was claimed to be a portrait of an artist of 1648, once at Castle Howard,[27] and in 1961 Norton Simon bought a Hals then called a portrait of Cappelle, but now just Portrait of a Young Man.[28] There were also portraits by Gerbrandt van den Eeckhout and Jan van Noordt, also untraced.[2]

The collection had major groups as follows:[29]

  • Rembrandt: 7 paintings and five portfolios with over 500 drawings,[30] including 56 "histories", an album of 135 drawings of women and children, and 300 landscape drawings - almost all those known of the last two types. This was the largest group of Rembrandt drawings ever owned by a collector.[31]
  • Simon de Vlieger: 9 paintings and over 1,300 drawings including one unfinished painting,[32]
  • Jan van Goyen: 10 paintings and over 400 drawings
  • Jan Porcellis: 16 paintings
  • Hendrick Avercamp: paintings and nearly 900 drawings
  • Hercules Segers: 5 paintings, a large proportion of his known output and perhaps bought from Rembrandt.
  • There were seven paintings listed, one unfinished, made by van de Cappelle himself,[33] but between 800 drawings, perhaps around 1150, including works described as copies by him after Porcellis and de Vlieger
  • Several portfolios with drawings by Esias van de Velde (88), Pieter van Laer (41), Willem Buytewech (86), Pieter de Molijn (57), and Allaert van Everdingen (52)

The collection included paintings by Jan Lievens, Hendrick Goltzius, Paulus Potter, Adam Elsheimer, Dürer, David Vinckboons, Pieter Aertsen, Holbein, Jacob Pynas, Jan Miense Molenaer, Maarten van Heemskerck, Frans Floris, Philips Koninck and Pieter Lastman; Flemish artists represented included Rubens (three paintings), Van Dyck, Jacob Jordaens, Pieter Bruegel the Elder and Adriaen Brouwer. Van de Capelle owned 83 drawings by Jan den Uyl. The large groups of drawings by individual artists suggest that he had bought their studio stock of working drawings complete after their death or retirement. The Rembrandt drawings were probably acquired at his insolvency sales in 1656 and 1658.[34]

Reputation and location of works edit

Van de Cappelle had a considerable influence on painters of both marine and winter subjects, including Willem van de Velde the Younger in the former group, Jan van Kessel in the latter, and Hendrick Dubbels in both.[2]

Van de Cappelle does not seem to have participated much in the commercial art world of his day, which may account for his absence from all the contemporary collections of artists' biographies such as the over 500 lives by Arnold Houbraken's in his De groote schouwburg der Nederlandsche kunstschilders en schilderessen – "The Great Theatre of Dutch Painters", (1718–21). Joachim von Sandrart (1606–1688) and Samuel van Hoogstraten (1627–1678) also overlook him. This was also probably partly the result of the biographers' following contemporary prejudices against marine, landscape, and still life painting, regarded as the lowest in the hierarchy of genres. He was for long perhaps better known in England than Holland, and the distribution of his works still reflects this.[citation needed]

The largest collection of his work is the nine paintings in London, as mentioned above. There are works in the Rijksmuseum, the Mauritshuis,[35] Rijksmuseum Twenthe, in the Getty Museum, Metropolitan Museum of Art,[36] National Museum of Wales, Detroit Institute of Arts, Manchester Art Gallery (3), Nationalmuseum, Wallraf-Richartz Museum and elsewhere.[37]

Notes edit

  1. ^ "Capelle", which he sometimes used himself, is also found. His signatures may also use "Capel" and "Joannes". MacLaren, 73
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Grove
  3. ^ In 1666 he gave his occupation to a notary as "dyer".
  4. ^ Jeroen Giltay en Jan Kelch, Lof der Zeevaart, de Hollandse zeeschilders van de 17de eeuw (Rotterdam, 1996), pp. 187; Birthcertificate Amsterdam City Archive [1][permanent dead link]
  5. ^ MacLaren, 73, Grove.
  6. ^ Dutch Culture in a European Perspective: 1650, hard-won unity Door Willem Frijhoff, Marijke Spies [2]
  7. ^ Bredius, A. (1892) De schilder Johannes van de Capelle, p. 29. In: Oud-Holland 10., see also Michel 62 and most writers
  8. ^ Michel, 156
  9. ^ MacLaren, pp. 74, 76; this is NG 966, where the last digit is unreadable. Another painting, possibly not authentic, is said to have a date of 1671 or 1675.
  10. ^ . Archived from the original on 12 November 2007. Retrieved 4 April 2010.
  11. ^ . Archived from the original on 24 July 2011. Retrieved 4 April 2010.
  12. ^ The purchase of the house is surprising. Liedtke suggests it had to do with the distance to the dye works. Liedtke, W. (2008) Dutch Paintings in the Metropolitan Museum of Art, p. 120. Yale University Press. New Haven and London.
  13. ^ Breen, J.C. (1913) De woning van Jan van der Heyden in de Koestraat met eenige bijzonderheden uit de geschiedenis deezer straat. In: Yearbook Amstelodamum, p. 111. Being a "Mr schilder" would mean he was admissioned as a master in the painters guild.[citation needed]
  14. ^ a b Grove and MacLaren
  15. ^ After the death of his son, also called Jan, his share of the collection was dispersed. One large sale was on 6, 7 and 8 November 1709. See Dutch drawings in the Pierpont Morgan Library, Volume 1; Dudok van Heel, S.A.C. (1975) Honderdvijftig advertenties van kunstverkopingen uit veertig jaargangen van de Amsterdamsech Courant 1672-1711, p. 171. In: Yearbook Amstelodamum.
  16. ^ Bredius, A. (1892) De schilder Johannes van de Capelle, p. 26-40. In: Oud-Holland 10. An English translation of his inventory is in: Russell, M. (1975).
  17. ^ Reprinted here Inventory of clothes App II, Q, pp 348-9
  18. ^ MacLaren, 73 says "about forty" winter landscapes, but this seems outdated or a mistake. Grove ("fewer than twenty") and more recent sources give far fewer - see the list given by Lindsay Fine Art 5 March 2012 at the Wayback Machine who recognise only about fifteen]
  19. ^ Richard Green. One recorded as dated 1644 is untraced, per Grove.
  20. ^ MacLaren, 73-79, or see online link below
  21. ^ A "Storm" mentioned in his inventory is untraced
  22. ^ Landscape into Art, 31
  23. ^ Grove - Hollstein gives him nine, but most of these are now not regarded as his.
  24. ^ Buvelot, Quentin; Buijs, Hans (2002). A Choice Collection: Seventeenth-century Dutch Paintings from the Frits Lugt Collection. ISBN 9789040086854.
  25. ^ Rooses, M. (1898) DE HOLLANDSCHE MEESTERS [3] 2015-09-24 at the Wayback Machine. The inventory of Capelle's estate was first published by Abraham Bredius, also in Oud Holland
  26. ^ Slive, 220
  27. ^ Rembrandt
  28. ^ Norton Simon Museum; and Simon's purchase
  29. ^ see note at end of section for all these
  30. ^ For drawings see note at end of section. For the paintings, apart from the pair of portraits, NG 1400, a unique grisaille study for an etching of the Ecce Homo, matches one of the inventory items. MacLaren, 346-349; National Gallery online
  31. ^ JSTORFour Dutch Landscape Drawings, Louise S. Richards, The Bulletin of the Cleveland Museum of Art, Vol. 48, No. 10 (Dec., 1961), pp. 266-270. For their later history, see Wedmore
  32. ^ One of them is described in the inventory as "nr. 5 Een gedootverwde dito van Simon de Vlieger". ("ditto" refers to the subject of the painting listed under "nr. 4 Een gedootverwde see van den Overleden" = Jan van der Capelle. The word "onvolledig" means literally "not complete" in this case it means probably " gedoodverfd" (dead colour: the first layers of paints –fairly monotone in shade- applied by the artist). Rijksbureau voor Kunsthistorische Documentatie RKD/Netherlands Institute for Art History
  33. ^ Bredius, A. (1892) De schilder Johannes van de Capelle, p. 32-37. In: Oud-Holland 10. Two landscapes (106, 107), a sea after Porcellis (116) a storm (119), a Schenkenschans after de Vlieger and a model (?) (167)
  34. ^ Details variously from Grove, MacLaren, Slive and Slive on Rembrandt drawings; Crenshaw, 162, note 14. The inventory was first printed by Bredius in 1898, and is reprinted in Russell's monograph.
  35. ^ Art Tribune 19 September 2017 at the Wayback Machine Mauritshuis acquisition
  36. ^ MMA
  37. ^ Artcyclopedia

References edit

  • Richard Green Gallery,
  • "Grove", Russell Margarita, Jan van de Cappelle in Grove Art Online, accessed April 1, 2010
  • Neil MacLaren, The Dutch School, 1600–1800, Volume I, 1991, National Gallery Catalogues, National Gallery, London, ISBN 0-947645-99-3
  • Michel, Emil, Rembrandt, His Life, his Work, and his Time, Heinemann, 1894
  • Seymour Slive, Dutch Painting, 1600–1800, Yale UP, 1995,ISBN 0-300-07451-4

Further reading edit

External links edit

  • National Gallery collection

cappelle, joannes, capelle, various, combinations, january, 1626, baptized, december, 1679, buried, dutch, golden, painter, seascapes, winter, landscapes, also, notable, industrialist, collector, considered, outstanding, marine, painter, 17th, century, holland. Jan van de Cappelle or Joannes van der Capelle in various combinations 25 January 1626 baptized 22 December 1679 buried 1 was a Dutch Golden Age painter of seascapes and winter landscapes also notable as an industrialist and art collector He is now considered the outstanding marine painter of 17th century Holland 2 Jan van de Cappelle by Gerbrand van den EeckhoutShipping in a Calm at Flushing with a States General Yacht Firing a Salute 1649He lived all his life in Amsterdam and as well as working as an artist spent much or most 3 of his time helping to manage his father Franchoy s large dyeworks which specialized in the expensive dye carmine and which he eventually inherited in 1674 Presumably because of this dual career there are fewer than 150 surviving paintings 2 a relatively small number for the industrious painters of the Dutch Golden Age His marine paintings usually show estuary or river scenes rather than the open sea and the water is always very calm allowing it to act as a mirror reflecting the cloud formations above this effect was Cappelle s speciality Contents 1 Life 2 Works 3 Art collection 4 Reputation and location of works 5 Notes 6 References 7 Further reading 8 External linksLife edit nbsp The Home Fleet Saluting the State Barge 1650 a parade picture 64 92 5 cm 25 20 36 42 in His father 1594 1674 was a cloth dyer his mother came from Rotterdam they married in 1622 in Amsterdam Joannes baptism is recorded in the Nieuwe Kerk Amsterdam on 25 January 1626 4 He was described by Gerbrand van den Eeckhout as a self taught artist but probably received some form of training from Simon de Vlieger whose style he copied or is closest to his early paintings and perhaps other masters such as Willem van de Velde the Elder He received the citizenship of Amsterdam on 24 July 1653 an essentially honorific ceremony for one of the city elite 5 A few months before on 2 February 1653 he had married Annetje Jansdr Grotingh the daughter of a bricklayer Van de Cappelle was a very wealthy man who never needed to rely on his painting for his livelihood 2 and it is not known if he joined the city s Guild of Saint Luke or the separate brotherhood of painters founded in 1653 6 Whether he sold his work or how he did so is unclear nbsp Winterlandscape Rijksmuseum nbsp A Calm 1654Abraham Bredius suggested Van de Cappelle was a friend of Rembrandt 7 at whose insolvency sales in 1656 and 1658 he was a large buyer and who painted portraits of him and his wife It has been speculated that he may have used his business contacts to help obtain the commission for Rembrandt s last and financially very useful group portrait commission the Syndics of the Drapers Guild of 1662 8 His earliest dated painting is an important and already highly accomplished one from 1645 and only one is dated in the 1660s 9 From this most authors assume he devoted his later years to his business in which his brother Franchois also worked In May 1661 he bought a house in the Koestraat 10 near Nieuwmarkt moving from the even more expensive Keizersgracht 11 12 The house with a garden next to a school was sold by a son of Sweelinck and in the deed of purchase van de Cappelle is simply called schilder painter and not a master painter 13 His wife predeceased him in 1677 and van de Cappelle himself was buried in the Nieuwe Kerk on 22 December 1679 He left seven children 14 The inventory of his property at death has survived and is the main source of information about his impressive art collection It took seven months to list all 15 He left his children six houses a country house south of Loenen on the river Vecht Utrecht a pleasure yacht 44 bags of ducats silk and bonds together valued at 92 720 guilders 16 A lengthy list of the items from his splendid wardrobe was made including his violet stockings 17 as well as a list of his large and important art collection 14 Works edit nbsp A Calm 1650 1655The majority of his works are marine or river views nearly always with several vessels but he also left a number of small winter landscapes somewhat in the manner of Aert van der Neer 18 these all seem to date between 1652 and 1654 19 His seascapes using the term loosely may be large or small the nine examples in the National Gallery London the largest group in a single collection vary between 122 x 154 5 cm NG 967 48 x 61 inches and 34 8 x 48 1 cm NG 865 14 x 19 inches 20 He had no interest in rough seas or cloudless skies 21 showing large cloudy skies with the horizon low about 15 20 of the way up the vertical axis The clouds are often mirrored in the dead calm water although light ripples may be shown As is often the case in Dutch seascapes there is often a warship or statenjacht States yacht an official yacht used for transport official salutes and other business The edge of the composition often slices through vessels leaving them half seen Van de Cappelle painted many parade marine subjects depicting a formal gathering of ships for a ceremonial occasion 2 Other paintings mostly smaller and of less busy subjects a type often called calms show an all pervading luminous atmosphere that softens all outlines and unifies forms and local colours 2 or as Kenneth Clark puts it When sky was reflected on water there was achieved that unity of luminous atmosphere which is the whole point of van de Capelle and van de Velde 22 In his early works he followed the muted palette of the tonal school but enlived with local highlights of bright colour but moved in his later works to a warmer golden tonality exceptionally allowing himself a greater colouristic exuberance when setting the rosy glow of a sunset sky against water of a deep turquoise blue as in the River Scene with Sailing Vessels Rotterdam Boymans van Beuningen Museum 2 According to his leading scholar Margarita Russell More than any other artist of his time with the exception only of Rembrandt van de Cappelle was a painter of light 2 Cappelle made a small number of etchings only two signed ones of landscapes are now firmly attributed to him 23 Fewer than twenty of the nearly 750 of his own drawings in the 1680 inventory have survived identifiably 24 Art collection edit nbsp This painting by Frans Hals was formerly considered to be the lost portrait of Jan van de Cappelle nbsp One of van de Cappelle s 500 Rembrandt drawings nbsp Winter LandscapeHe had one of the largest art collections of his day with 192 25 paintings and over 7 000 drawings 2 nearly all Dutch with a few Flemish works and concentrating heavily on his own specialisms of marine painting and winter landscapes He had portraits of himself by both Rembrandt one of a pair with his wife and Frans Hals and he is the only person known to have been painted by both of the greatest Dutch portraitists 26 However if they survive the identity of both paintings has been lost The Rembrandt was claimed to be a portrait of an artist of 1648 once at Castle Howard 27 and in 1961 Norton Simon bought a Hals then called a portrait of Cappelle but now just Portrait of a Young Man 28 There were also portraits by Gerbrandt van den Eeckhout and Jan van Noordt also untraced 2 The collection had major groups as follows 29 Rembrandt 7 paintings and five portfolios with over 500 drawings 30 including 56 histories an album of 135 drawings of women and children and 300 landscape drawings almost all those known of the last two types This was the largest group of Rembrandt drawings ever owned by a collector 31 Simon de Vlieger 9 paintings and over 1 300 drawings including one unfinished painting 32 Jan van Goyen 10 paintings and over 400 drawings Jan Porcellis 16 paintings Hendrick Avercamp paintings and nearly 900 drawings Hercules Segers 5 paintings a large proportion of his known output and perhaps bought from Rembrandt There were seven paintings listed one unfinished made by van de Cappelle himself 33 but between 800 drawings perhaps around 1150 including works described as copies by him after Porcellis and de Vlieger Several portfolios with drawings by Esias van de Velde 88 Pieter van Laer 41 Willem Buytewech 86 Pieter de Molijn 57 and Allaert van Everdingen 52 The collection included paintings by Jan Lievens Hendrick Goltzius Paulus Potter Adam Elsheimer Durer David Vinckboons Pieter Aertsen Holbein Jacob Pynas Jan Miense Molenaer Maarten van Heemskerck Frans Floris Philips Koninck and Pieter Lastman Flemish artists represented included Rubens three paintings Van Dyck Jacob Jordaens Pieter Bruegel the Elder and Adriaen Brouwer Van de Capelle owned 83 drawings by Jan den Uyl The large groups of drawings by individual artists suggest that he had bought their studio stock of working drawings complete after their death or retirement The Rembrandt drawings were probably acquired at his insolvency sales in 1656 and 1658 34 Reputation and location of works editVan de Cappelle had a considerable influence on painters of both marine and winter subjects including Willem van de Velde the Younger in the former group Jan van Kessel in the latter and Hendrick Dubbels in both 2 Van de Cappelle does not seem to have participated much in the commercial art world of his day which may account for his absence from all the contemporary collections of artists biographies such as the over 500 lives by Arnold Houbraken s in his De groote schouwburg der Nederlandsche kunstschilders en schilderessen The Great Theatre of Dutch Painters 1718 21 Joachim von Sandrart 1606 1688 and Samuel van Hoogstraten 1627 1678 also overlook him This was also probably partly the result of the biographers following contemporary prejudices against marine landscape and still life painting regarded as the lowest in the hierarchy of genres He was for long perhaps better known in England than Holland and the distribution of his works still reflects this citation needed The largest collection of his work is the nine paintings in London as mentioned above There are works in the Rijksmuseum the Mauritshuis 35 Rijksmuseum Twenthe in the Getty Museum Metropolitan Museum of Art 36 National Museum of Wales Detroit Institute of Arts Manchester Art Gallery 3 Nationalmuseum Wallraf Richartz Museum and elsewhere 37 Notes edit Capelle which he sometimes used himself is also found His signatures may also use Capel and Joannes MacLaren 73 a b c d e f g h i j Grove In 1666 he gave his occupation to a notary as dyer Jeroen Giltay en Jan Kelch Lof der Zeevaart de Hollandse zeeschilders van de 17de eeuw Rotterdam 1996 pp 187 Birthcertificate Amsterdam City Archive 1 permanent dead link MacLaren 73 Grove Dutch Culture in a European Perspective 1650 hard won unity Door Willem Frijhoff Marijke Spies 2 Bredius A 1892 De schilder Johannes van de Capelle p 29 In Oud Holland 10 see also Michel 62 and most writers Michel 156 MacLaren pp 74 76 this is NG 966 where the last digit is unreadable Another painting possibly not authentic is said to have a date of 1671 or 1675 View on Koestraat Archived from the original on 12 November 2007 Retrieved 4 April 2010 View on Keizersgracht Archived from the original on 24 July 2011 Retrieved 4 April 2010 The purchase of the house is surprising Liedtke suggests it had to do with the distance to the dye works Liedtke W 2008 Dutch Paintings in the Metropolitan Museum of Art p 120 Yale University Press New Haven and London Breen J C 1913 De woning van Jan van der Heyden in de Koestraat met eenige bijzonderheden uit de geschiedenis deezer straat In Yearbook Amstelodamum p 111 Being a Mr schilder would mean he was admissioned as a master in the painters guild citation needed a b Grove and MacLaren After the death of his son also called Jan his share of the collection was dispersed One large sale was on 6 7 and 8 November 1709 See Dutch drawings in the Pierpont Morgan Library Volume 1 Dudok van Heel S A C 1975 Honderdvijftig advertenties van kunstverkopingen uit veertig jaargangen van de Amsterdamsech Courant 1672 1711 p 171 In Yearbook Amstelodamum Bredius A 1892 De schilder Johannes van de Capelle p 26 40 In Oud Holland 10 An English translation of his inventory is in Russell M 1975 Reprinted here Inventory of clothes App II Q pp 348 9 MacLaren 73 says about forty winter landscapes but this seems outdated or a mistake Grove fewer than twenty and more recent sources give far fewer see the list given by Lindsay Fine Art Archived 5 March 2012 at the Wayback Machine who recognise only about fifteen Richard Green One recorded as dated 1644 is untraced per Grove MacLaren 73 79 or see online link below A Storm mentioned in his inventory is untraced Landscape into Art 31 Grove Hollstein gives him nine but most of these are now not regarded as his Buvelot Quentin Buijs Hans 2002 A Choice Collection Seventeenth century Dutch Paintings from the Frits Lugt Collection ISBN 9789040086854 Rooses M 1898 DE HOLLANDSCHE MEESTERS 3 Archived 2015 09 24 at the Wayback Machine The inventory of Capelle s estate was first published by Abraham Bredius also in Oud Holland Slive 220 Rembrandt Norton Simon Museum and Simon s purchase see note at end of section for all these For drawings see note at end of section For the paintings apart from the pair of portraits NG 1400 a unique grisaille study for an etching of the Ecce Homo matches one of the inventory items MacLaren 346 349 National Gallery online JSTORFour Dutch Landscape Drawings Louise S Richards The Bulletin of the Cleveland Museum of Art Vol 48 No 10 Dec 1961 pp 266 270 For their later history see Wedmore One of them is described in the inventory as nr 5 Een gedootverwde dito van Simon de Vlieger ditto refers to the subject of the painting listed under nr 4 Een gedootverwde see van den Overleden Jan van der Capelle The word onvolledig means literally not complete in this case it means probably gedoodverfd dead colour the first layers of paints fairly monotone in shade applied by the artist Rijksbureau voor Kunsthistorische Documentatie RKD Netherlands Institute for Art History Bredius A 1892 De schilder Johannes van de Capelle p 32 37 In Oud Holland 10 Two landscapes 106 107 a sea after Porcellis 116 a storm 119 a Schenkenschans after de Vlieger and a model 167 Details variously from Grove MacLaren Slive and Slive on Rembrandt drawings Crenshaw 162 note 14 The inventory was first printed by Bredius in 1898 and is reprinted in Russell s monograph Art Tribune Archived 19 September 2017 at the Wayback Machine Mauritshuis acquisition MMA ArtcyclopediaReferences editRichard Green Gallery A Winter Landscape and biography Grove Russell Margarita Jan van de Cappelle in Grove Art Online accessed April 1 2010 Neil MacLaren The Dutch School 1600 1800 Volume I 1991 National Gallery Catalogues National Gallery London ISBN 0 947645 99 3 Michel Emil Rembrandt His Life his Work and his Time Heinemann 1894 Seymour Slive Dutch Painting 1600 1800 Yale UP 1995 ISBN 0 300 07451 4Further reading editRussell Margarita Jan van de Cappelle 1624 6 1679 Lewis Leigh on Sea 1975 ISBN 0 85317 029 0 ISBN 978 0 85317 029 7External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Paintings by Jan van de Cappelle Getty Museum biography National Gallery collection Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Jan van de Cappelle amp oldid 1160530601, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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