18th Century Dutch Old Master Drawing By Jacob De Wit (amsterdam 1695–1754) Winter
Jacob de Wit (Amsterdam 1695 – 1754 Amsterdam)
A Personification of Winter
Pen and brown ink, red chalk, brown ink framing lines, on paper washed light brown, 217 x 115 mm (8.5 x 4.5 inch)
Signed ‘JdWit’ (pen and brown ink, lower left); annotated ‘No 118’ in an early hand on the verso of the mount (pen and brown ink)
Provenance
~ Paul Brandt (1900–1984), Amsterdam, from whom purchased on 15 November 1927 for fl. 5 by:
~ Professor Johan Quirijn van Regteren Altena, Amsterdam (1899–1980)
***
Jacob de Wit was born in Amsterdam and received his early training when he was only nine years old from the painter Albert Spiers.1 At the age of thirteen he left for Antwerp to study with Jacob van Hall and became an admirer of Rubens and Van Dyck. De Wit quickly developed into the leading decorative painter in Amsterdam. From 1717 on De Wit had so much work on his hands ‘that he scarcely knew were to begin’, according to the artist’s biographer Jacob van Gool in 1750.
This powerful drawing of a standing woman, probably a personification of Winter, takes a special place in De Wit’s drawn oeuvre. Its strong and rather severe yet loose handling differs from his usual light and airy manner. It is strongly reminiscent of the drawings of Rembrandt, and maybe Rubens, active a century previously. Some other drawings in a comparable style by De Wit are known; our sheet may for instance be compared to a Deposition in the Amsterdam Museum The Amsterdam drawing is dated early in De Wit’s career, in his Antwerp period, when he was deeply influenced by the drawings of Rubens and Van Dyck.
A Personification of Winter
Pen and brown ink, red chalk, brown ink framing lines, on paper washed light brown, 217 x 115 mm (8.5 x 4.5 inch)
Signed ‘JdWit’ (pen and brown ink, lower left); annotated ‘No 118’ in an early hand on the verso of the mount (pen and brown ink)
Provenance
~ Paul Brandt (1900–1984), Amsterdam, from whom purchased on 15 November 1927 for fl. 5 by:
~ Professor Johan Quirijn van Regteren Altena, Amsterdam (1899–1980)
***
Jacob de Wit was born in Amsterdam and received his early training when he was only nine years old from the painter Albert Spiers.1 At the age of thirteen he left for Antwerp to study with Jacob van Hall and became an admirer of Rubens and Van Dyck. De Wit quickly developed into the leading decorative painter in Amsterdam. From 1717 on De Wit had so much work on his hands ‘that he scarcely knew were to begin’, according to the artist’s biographer Jacob van Gool in 1750.
This powerful drawing of a standing woman, probably a personification of Winter, takes a special place in De Wit’s drawn oeuvre. Its strong and rather severe yet loose handling differs from his usual light and airy manner. It is strongly reminiscent of the drawings of Rembrandt, and maybe Rubens, active a century previously. Some other drawings in a comparable style by De Wit are known; our sheet may for instance be compared to a Deposition in the Amsterdam Museum The Amsterdam drawing is dated early in De Wit’s career, in his Antwerp period, when he was deeply influenced by the drawings of Rubens and Van Dyck.
3 750 €
Period: 18th century
Style: Louis 14th, Regency
Condition: Good condition
Material: Paper
Reference (ID): 1779545
Availability: In stock
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