Lot 139
  • 139

Jan Verkolje the Elder

Estimate
20,000 - 30,000 GBP
bidding is closed

Description

  • Jan Verkolje the Elder
  • Portrait of a family in a park landscape, attended by their Dalmatian
  • signed and dated lower centre on the step: I·VERKOLJE 1688
  • oil on canvas laid on board

Provenance

Possibly commissioned by the ancestors of the Van Nispen family;
By family descent for several generations.

Catalogue Note

Though born and trained in Amsterdam, Verkolje settled in Delft in 1672, where this portrait was painted.  Delft did not have a strong native portrait tradition and adopted the norms of portraiture that were fashionable in and around the Dutch Court in The Hague, a short distance away.  This picture is a splendid example of grand Dutch family portraiture in the last quarter of the 18th Century, in which a lavishly attired family pose in a grand garden setting, framed by imposing giant columns, and attended by their Dalmatian.

Dalmatians are not documented until the 18th Century, but they occur in portraits done in both northern and southern Europe in the 17th Century.  One of the earliest is to be found in Justus Sustermans' portrait of Francesco di Cosimo II Medici (Florence, Uffizi), which dates from 1622.  That and the present work and others show that Dalmatians were then more thickly spotted in black than they often are today.

The Van Nispen family, originally from Dordrecht, settled in various parts of The Netherlands, including Zeeland and Gelderland.