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Boslandschap met een beek

Boslandschap met een beek

Hans Bol (in 1588)

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Specificaties

Titel Boslandschap met een beek
Materiaal en techniek Zwart krijt (sporen), pen in bruine inkt, grijs gewassen, kaderlijnen met de pen in grijs-bruine inkt
Objectsoort
Tekening > Tweedimensionaal object > Kunstvoorwerp
Locatie Dit object is in het depot
Afmetingen Hoogte 146 cm
Breedte 212 cm
Makers Tekenaar: Hans Bol
Inventarisnummer N 36 (PK)
Credits Bruikleen Stichting Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen (voormalige collectie Koenigs), 1940
Collectie Tekeningen & Prenten
Verwervingsdatum 1940
Vervaardigingsdatum in 1588
Signatuur 'Hans Bol 1588' (middenonder, in pen in grijs-bruine inkt)
Watermerk Heraldische adelaar (fragment, onderkant; staart en gespreide klauwen, 35 x 65 mm, op P2-3 van links, op de rand linksonder)(vH, 7P). [AE]
Inscripties '217' (verso, midden, in potlood)
Verzamelaar Franz Koenigs
Merkteken F.W. Koenigs (L.1023a)
Tentoonstellingen Rotterdam 2004b; Parijs/Rotterdam 2014, nr. 34; Washington 2017, nr. #
Interne tentoonstellingen Het jaar rond met Bol (2004)
Vroege Nederlandse tekeningen - Van Bosch tot Bloemaert (deel 2) (2015)
Externe tentoonstellingen Bosch to Bloemaert. Early Netherlandish Drawings from the Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen (2014)
Bosch to Bloemaert. Early Netherlandish Drawings (2017)
Onderzoek Toon onderzoek Nederlandse tekeningen uit de vijftiende en zestiende eeuw
Literatuur Franz 1965, pp. 50, 64, nr. 127, pl. 109; Franz 1969, dl. 1, p. 396, dl. 2, p. 168, ill. 322; Londen/Parijs/Cambridge 2002, p. 28, onder nr. 2, ill. 1; Collection Catalogue 2012 (online)
Materiaal
Object
Techniek
Grijs gewassen > Wassen > Gewassen > Tekentechniek > Techniek > Materiaal en techniek
Geografische herkomst Zuidelijke Nederlanden > Nederlanden > West-Europa > Europa
Plaats van vervaardiging Amsterdam > Noord-Holland > Nederland > West-Europa > Europa
Geografische herkomst Noordelijke Nederlanden > Nederlanden > West-Europa > Europa

Entry bestandscatalogus Vroeg Nederlandse tekeningen uit de 15e en 16e eeuw

Auteur: Albert J. Elen

Deze beschrijving is momenteel alleen beschikbaar in het Engels.

A similar forest landscape drawing, dated 1590, of approximately the same size and in the same technique, is now in Boston (ill. 1).1 Both drawings, dated two years apart, are imaginary forest views, in which the human figure is practically absent. Only two schematically indicated tiny figures can be discerned in each of them. Bol started making these pure forest landscapes, leaving out biblical or allegorical scenes, only later in his career. Franz (1963) was the first to remark Bols innovative approach in the depiction of these forest landscapes. The artist used his favourite drawing technique of pen and brown ink combined with washes in grey ink to create a convincing sense of depth by alternating shadowed and sun-lit areas, the trees on individual slopes serving as natural coulisses, leaving open a central ‘passage way’ leading to the vanishing point in the lower centre. Whereas the Boston drawing shows an open space in the forest, with the sky visible in the centre, the composition of the Rotterdam drawing is almost entirely closed by the trees, the foliage filling most of the upper section, allowing only a limited open area at top right with a distant view to the church on a hill. In this respect Bol’s composition resembles a (much larger) drawing from the so-called Gillis van Coninxloo Group in Dresden, formerly attributed to David Vinckboons.2

Two similar forest views, now both in Paris, precede the two in Rotterdam and Boston: they are in the same technique and are both dated 1586.3 One depicts a somewhat open forest landscape like the one in Boston, the other a closed forest interior with a fallen tree (ill. 2), much like the Rotterdam drawing. These are probably based on studies made from direct observation in the countryside, like two small landscapes in metalpoint on white prepared paper, now in Paris (ill. 3).4 The two combined individual drawings, on the reverse of the right half of an unsigned and undated wide panoramic view of Dordrecht from the North, are very close in setting and style and even though being studies from nature, they have a high degree of finish.5 Bol probably made these drawings in a (hypothetical, now lost) sketch-book during the period of approximately two years that he lived in Dordrecht, where his brother Jacob also stayed for several years.6 Afterwards the component parts of the city panorama’s were joined together, whereas the compositionally unrelated verso landscape drawings were separated by drawn cadres.

The outlines of the drawings in Rotterdam and Boston have not been incised for transfer of the image to a copper plate for engraving and the drawings may therefore be considered works of art in their own right, fully signed and dated, meant to be sold.

fig.1 Hans Bol. Two forest landscapes. Paris, Fondation Custodia, Collection Frits Lugt, inv. no. 1997/T 1 v

Noten

1 Boston, Maida and George Abrams Collection; Franz 1965, pp. 51, 64, no. 143a, pl. 119; London/Paris/Cambridge 2002, no. 2, ill.

2 Inv.nr. C 976, see Ketelsen/Hahn 2011, pp. 244-245, pl. xxxi, p. 370.

3 Paris, Musée du Louvre, inv. nos. 20953 and 19591, measuring resp. 180 x 311 and 182 x 310 mm; Franz 1963, pp. 68-70, ills. 4 (replica in Munich) and 5 (with wrong inv. no.); Franz 1965, p. 63, nos. 120 and 119 (replica’s in Munich, Staatliche Graphische Sammlung, inv. nos. 1841 and 1840), pl. 101.

4 Paris, Fondation Custodia, Collection Frits Lugt, inv. no. 1997-T 1 v (two sheets pasted together, 123 x 352 mm, the reverse drawings individually framed). Another view of Dordrecht, the city harbor, likewise in metalpoint on prepared paper, is also in the Frits Lugt Collection, inv. no. 1977-T 20 (123 x 378 mm); it also consists of two sheets glued together, with two drawings on the reverse. The two sheets were originally attached, the drawing being part of a wide panoramic view of Dordrecht (see Hautekeete 2012, pp. 343-345, ill. 23, p. 353 n. 18).

5 A similar double-sided metalpoint drawing by Bol—a panoramic view of Antwerp on the front and two unrelated drawings, a study of eight ships at sea and a landscape in the Delfsgauw polder near Delft, on the reverse—is in London, The British Museum, inv. no. 1895,0915.983; Franz 1965, p. 63, no. 104, pl. 90; Hautekeete 2012, p. 343, ill. 22, p. 353 n. 19; A. van Suchtelen, ‘Hans Bol. Een van de eerste schilders van het Hollandse stadsgezicht’, Antiek 28 (Dec. 1993), pp. 220-227, esp. pp. 223-224, ills. 5 and 6. Van Suchtelen suggests that the London drawing comes from a lost sketch-book, which still has to be ascertained by codicological evidence.

6 He stayed in Dordrecht according to Van Mander, yet undocumented; Van Mander 1604, fols 260v19-20 (ed. Miedema 1994, vol. 1, pp. 300-301, vol. 4, commentary, p. 214. The date of the Rotterdam drawing would then furnish a terminus ante quem for the coupled drawings now in Paris. Possibly, Bol made a similar gouache view of Dordrecht on parchment, now lost, or at least intended to do so, on the basis of the design drawing in Paris. He also made detailed city views of The Hague (1586 and 1589) and Amsterdam (1589); A. van Suchtelen and A.K. Wheelock, Hollandse stadsgezichten uit de Gouden Eeuw, The Hague-Washington-Zwolle 2008, pp. 96-99. no. 13; Franz 1965, no. 182, pl. 139.

Toon onderzoek Nederlandse tekeningen uit de vijftiende en zestiende eeuw
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Alles over de maker

Hans Bol

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