Old Masters Day Auction

Old Masters Day Auction

View full screen - View 1 of Lot 106. An extensive mountainous landscape with travelling shepherds and cattle, a lake beyond.

Property from a Dutch Private Collection

Joos de Momper

An extensive mountainous landscape with travelling shepherds and cattle, a lake beyond

Lot Closed

July 7, 01:06 PM GMT

Estimate

30,000 - 40,000 GBP

Lot Details

Description

Property from a Dutch Private Collection


Joos de Momper

Antwerp 1564 - 1635

An extensive mountainous landscape with travelling shepherds and cattle, a lake beyond


oil on panel, the reverse incised with the panel maker's mark of Guilliam Aertssen (actc. 1612–after 1627) and with the annual letter ‘A’ only found in the guild year 1619–22

unframed: 55.1 x 95.7 cm.; 21⅝ x 37¾ in.

framed: 71.9 x 112.8 cm.; 28¼ x 44⅜ in.

M. Mogensen by 1946;
Acquired at an unidentified auction in Copenhagen, for DKK 178,000, by Abraham van der Meer (1927–2008), Amsterdam;
Thence by descent. 
Copenhagen, Statens Museum for Kunst, Katalog over aeldre udenlandske malerier fra privateje udstillede, October 1946, no. 66.

This work is a characteristic example of Joos de Momper’s atmospheric and sweeping landscapes for which he was celebrated. In Van Dyck’s Iconographie, a series of prints of his portraits reproducing the likenesses of approximately one hundred famous nobles, scholars, and artists, he is described as ‘Judocus de Momper Pictor montium Antwerpiae’ (‘Joos de Momper Antwerp Painter of mountains’).1 He was a prolific painter and is known for having collaborated with many artist during his lifetime, notably with Jan Brueghel the Elder, with whom he developed a long-lasting friendship. The figures in the present work are most likely to have been painted by the workshop of Jan Brueghel, with which de Momper collaborated on over 200 paintings. Their partnership may have begun as early as the late 1580s or alternatively from 1596 onwards, when both artists settled in Antwerp and ran successful workshops.2


The high viewpoint, with the wide, sweeping brush strokes and the arrangement of the landscape into two halves, with warmer tones in the foreground and cooler colours in the background, are typical features of de Momper’s mature style in the 1620s. Moreover, the reverse of the panel is incised with the letter A, a so-called annual letter only found in the guild year 1619-22, pointing out to a fabrication date of the panel in this period, however, the artist may have used it several years later.3


https://www.europeana.eu/en/item/9200495/yoolib_inha_782 

K. Ertz and C. Nitze-Ertz, Jan Brueghel der Ältere (1568–1625): Kritischer Katalog de Gemälde, vol. IV, Lingen, Germany 2008-2010, p. 137.

J. Wadum, ‘The Antwerp Brand on Paintings on Panel’, in Looking Through Paintings: The Study of Painting Techniques and Materials in Support of Art Historical Research, E. Hermens (ed.), Baarn 1998, p. 192.