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Famous Dutch Painters from Dordrecht, Ancient Capital of Holland
Part 14
Note : Please
do not email me with technical questions
about paintings and their age and
origin because I am not an expert
but I only have gathered information
about the Painters from the Netherlands
and specially from Dordrecht.
Dordrecht is not only known as
the oldest city and ancient capital
of Holland but also for the many
famous painters who were born or
lived in Dordrecht during the late
Middle ages and later centuries.
The most famous painters from
Dordrecht were :
Abraham Bloemaert, Ferdinand
Bol, Abraham van Calreat, Albaert,
Benjamin Gerritz and Jacob Gerritz
CUYP, Pieter Fontijn, Aert de Gelder,
Samuel van Hoogstraten, Arnold Houbraken,
Willem de Klerk, Frans Lebret, Jacobus
Leveck, Nicolaes Maes, Ary Scheffer,
Aert and Martinus Schouman, Abraham
van Strij, Jan Veth and many, many
others.
On the next pages you can find
many works from these famous painters
who were responsible for many styles
of paintings and they immortalized
the daily life and landscapes in
the 15th to 19th century. Most of
their masterpieces are nowadays
part of collections in museums all
over the world and of which many
can be seen in the local Dordrechts
Museum.
Dordrecht 1634 -
Amsterdam. 1693
Nicolaes was the son of the prosperous Dordrecht merchant Gerrit Maes and his
wife Ida Herman Claesdr from Ravestein. He learnt to draw from a ‘mediocre master’ (Houbraken)
in his native town before he studied painting with Rembrandt in Amsterdam. His
training in Rembrandt’s studio must have taken place between 1648/50 and 1653.
By December 1653 Maes had settled in Dordrecht and made plans to marry, while a
signed and dated picture of 1653 confirms that the 19-year-old artist had
completed his training and embarked on an independent career. In 1658 he bought
a house in Dordrecht Maes continued to
reside in Dordrecht until 1673.
Maes’s few pictures of biblical subjects and all
his approximately 40 genre paintings date from c. 1653 to c. 1660. Though
indebted to Rembrandt’s example, the early religious works exhibit a precocious
originality in the interpretation of the sacred text and iconographic tradition.
For instance, in the Expulsion of Hagar (1653, New York, Metropolitan Museum of
Art) Hagar’s inconsolable response to her dismissal and the characterization of
Ishmael as a prematurely embittered outcast mark it as one of the most poignant
renderings of a theme that was especially popular among Rembrandt’s students.
This and other biblical pictures are of cabinet size, Christ Blessing the
Children (London, National Gallery) is Maes’s only religious work with life-size
figures.
For a brief period in the mid-1650s Maes ranked among the most
innovative Dutch genre painters, owing to his talent for pictorial invention and
for devising expressive poses, gestures and physiognomies. He adapted
Rembrandt’s brushwork and chiaroscuro to the scenes of domestic life that
provided the favorite subject-matter for genre artists working in the third
quarter of the century. The poetic deployment of light and shade and the adeptly
designed figures invest his paintings of interior scenes with women absorbed in
household tasks with an atmosphere of studious concentration. In pictures of
spinners, lacemakers (e.g. The Lacemaker, 1655, Ottawa, National Gallery) and
mothers with children, dating from 1654 to 1658, household work assumes the
dignity and probity claimed for it by contemporary authors of didactic
literature on family life. Maes also executed a small group of works that show
everyday events taking place on the doorstep of a private house. Some depict
milkmaids ringing the doorbell or receiving payment for a pot of milk (e.g.
London, Apsley House), others represent boys asking for alms from the residents.
As in the interior scenes, Maes’s pictorial gifts transformed these mundane
transactions into events of solemn dignity. Another type of genre painting from
the mid-1650s shows a single, nearly life-size female figure in half or
three-quarter length. An elderly woman says grace before a modest meal, prays
amid vanitas symbols or dozes over a Bible, exemplifying, respectively,
spiritual vigor and spiritual lassitude in old age. In many of his pictures,
for example the Woman Plucking a Duck of 1655 or 1656 (Philadelphia, PA, Museum
of Art), Maes developed an innovative approach to the representation of interior
space.
He was among the first Dutch genre painters to depict the domestic
interior not as a shallow, three-walled box but as a suite of rooms. His new
disposition of domestic space resulted primarily from the narrative requirements
of these paintings. While he demonstrably perused perspective handbooks, he
resorted neither to a mathematically constructed space nor—with one exception—to trompe
l’oeil illusionism. Maes pursued his experiments for only a brief period
(1655–57), but his achievement exercised a decisive influence on the Delft
painters Johannes Vermeer and Pieter de Hooch and thus had lasting consequences
for the representation of interior space in 17th-century Dutch painting. While
concentrating on his genre and history paintings, Maes embarked on a productive,
35-year career as a portrait painter.
During the second half of the 1650s, when
his output of subject pictures gradually diminished, his production of portraits
steadily increased. Some 25 single, pendant and group portraits from the period
1655–60 have been preserved. However, from c. 1660 until the end of his career, Maes worked exclusively as a portraitist. He settled in Amsterdam in 1673,
making a bid to fill the vacancy left by the deaths of the portrait specialists
Bartholomeus van der Helst and Abraham van den Tempel. Soon, wrote Houbraken,
‘so much work came his way that it was deemed a favor if one person was granted
the opportunity to sit for his portrait before another, and so it remained for
the rest of his life’.
Hundreds of surviving portraits from the 1670s and 1680s
corroborate Houbraken’s report. Most are pendants in one of two favorite
formats, a smaller rectangular canvas with a half-length figure within a painted
oval, and a larger canvas with a three-quarter-length figure, usually shown
leaning against a fountain, rock or column. In both types, the setting is often
a garden or terrace before a sunset sky. There are several group portraits of
children or families, depicting the sitters full length in landscape settings,
but only one corporate group, the Six Governors of the Amsterdam Surgeons’
Guild (1680/81, Amsterdam, Rijksmueum), is known.
During his 40-year career, Maes’s painting technique evolved continuously, but his exceptional skill with
the brush never faltered. In the genre and history pictures of the prolific
period 1653/55, his color, chiaroscuro and brushwork owe a clear debt to
Rembrandt’s work of the mid-1640s, particularly to the latter’s Holy Family in
the Carpenter’s Shop (1645, St Petersburg, Hermitage). Maes restricted his
palette to blacks, browns, whites and reds and employed techniques ranging from
a meticulous ‘fine painting’ style in the description of wooden furniture or a
wicker cradle to a grainy—occasionally even pastose—application of richly
graduated tones in the execution of fabric and flesh. After the middle of the
decade, he increasingly favored a clearer light, smoother textures and more
definite contours.
Maes’s mature style developed gradually during the 1660s in
response to the Flemish mode of portraiture developed by van Dyck and introduced
into the northern Netherlands in the previous decade by such artists as Govaert
Flinck, Adriaen Hanneman and Jan Mijtens. From the early 1660s onwards, Maes
regularly employed staging and accessories derived from Flemish portraiture.
Although Houbraken reported that Maes once travelled to Antwerp, direct contact
with Flemish painting contributed less to his development than his study of
works by Mijtens, whose coloring and technique evidently inspired the
glistening reds and blues and brilliant brushwork of his later paintings.
Despite the general trend of his style, in some of his most sympathetic
portraits of the 1660s Maes continued to utilize a plain background and a
subdued palette (e.g. the Portrait of a Widow, 1667, Basle, Kunstmuseum). The
portraits of the 1670s and 1680s generally feature the same imaginary garden or
architectural setting with a foreground composed of columns, fountains, terraces
and billowing curtains, but they exhibit a novel repertory of graceful poses and
refinements in technique and coloring. The pale, solidly modeled Countenances
preserve—according to Houbraken’s reliable testimony—an accurate likeness of the
sitter, but the brilliantly rendered hair and clothing increasingly dominate the
image. Satiny fabrics in a broader and brighter range of reds, blues, oranges,
golds and violets shimmer with dashing, scumbled highlights, while the elaborate
curls of the period’s long hairstyles are described with a breathtaking show of
tonal painting in greys and browns (e.g. the Portrait of a Young Man, Munich, Alte Pinakothek). About 160 drawings by Maes have survived, making him one of
the few outstanding Dutch genre painters of his generation whose practice as a
draughtsman can be partially reconstructed. For the compositional projects Maes
used a variety of media, red chalk, pen and ink and combinations of chalk and
wash or ink and wash. Most are cursory sketches, for example the study in pen
and wash (Berlin, Kupferstichkab.) for The Lacemaker (1655, Ottawa, National
Gallery). The figure studies also exhibit a wide variety of media and
techniques. They range from spare contours delineated with the pen or brush to
exquisitely refined studies in red chalk (e.g. another study, Rotterdam, Boymans–van
Beuningen, for The Lacemaker) to broadly pictorial drawings executed in a
combination of chalk, ink, wash and bodycolour.
While early collectors of Maes’s
subject pictures remain unidentified, the known sitters in his portraits attest
that in this field Maes enjoyed from the outset the patronage of Dordrecht’s
political and mercantile élite. Jacob de Witt, whom he portrayed in 1657, was a
member of the city’s Old Council and the father of Grand Pensionary Johan de
Witt, the political leader of the United Provinces. A contract of 1658 records
that Maes acquired a house from Job Cuijter in exchange for a cash payment and
the portrait of Cuijter with his family. In 1659 or 1660 Maes painted a portrait
of Jacob Trip (The Hague, Mauritshuis), the first of several pendant portraits
with Trip’s wife Margaretha de Geer (both of whom were portrayed by Rembrandt
about the same time). Among Holland’s wealthiest families, the Trips and de
Geers amassed fortunes from Swedish iron mines and the manufacture of armaments.
During his last years in Dordrecht and during his Amsterdam period, Maes
continued to work for a varied clientele at the highest social levels, including
the Utrecht University professor of theology Gijsbert Voet, the preacher Cornelis Trigland; Hieronymus van Beverningk, Treasurer-General of the United
Provinces, diplomat and one time close confidant of Johan de Witt; the Amsterdam
burgomaster Gerrit Hendriksz. Hooft and the Lieutenant-Admiral of Zeeland. A few
of these portraits were reproduced in prints.
Nicolaes Maes in museums in The Netherlands
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Portrait of Margaretha de Geer
Nicolaes Maes, 1669
Oil on canvas 116 x 85 cm
Dordrechts Museum
Like Jacob Gerritsz. Cuyp and Rembrandt (1606-1669), Nicolaes Maes also
portrayed the couple Jacob Trip and Margaretha de Geer. The Trip's were among
the richest and most authoritative families of the 17th century. The 85-year-old Margaretha was widowed eight years when Maes painted this
monumental portrait of her. The black clothing is in sharp contrast with the
white cuffs and broad ruff. This type of collar was at the beginning of the
century well-worn, but after 1640 only rarely. As a woman of age Margaretha did
not followed the latest fashion.
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The Lyra-man
Nicolaes Maes
Oil on canvas 99 x 108,3 cm
Dordrechts Museum
The Lyra-man plays a "draailier", a stringed instrument with buttons for
different tones. The musician is in this painting accompanied by a boy who picks
up the money.
In the 17th century street musicians were often depicted as blind, shabby old
men. Around 1640 Rembrandt (1606-1669) painted musicians as a kind of old man
rather than as a sinister outcast. The public wasportrayed as well-mannered,
good citizens. Also on the Lyra-man of Maes we see well-dressed audience. The
musician and his companion stabbing in their bedraggled clothing sharp vagrants
out of the public good.
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Portrait of four children as mythological figures
Nicolaes Maas, 1674
Oil on canvas 103,5 x 124,5 cm
Dordrechts Museum
This painting, on the first look, shows a happy childhood but it has a sad
undertone. In the center is a child carried by an eagle. The reason goes back to
the myth of Ganymedes. Supreme Jupiter - in the shape of an eagle - abducted
this young man, to whom he had become in love, to the mountain Olympus. In the seventeenth century, the story lost much of its sexual overtones and
got a Christian interpretation. The myth was often used in connection with the
death of a child, Ganymedes was seen as the fault child soul that rises to God.
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The Handmaid
Nicolaes Maes
Oil on
panel 57,3 x 41,6 cm
Dordrechts Museum
In the late 1650s Maes was often inspired by everyday life. Sometimes he gave
a moralistic turn to some topic. On this panel, he painted a servant who is on
the back of the fish market seduced to a chat. Her time away, they do not see a
dog that excessive focus on the salmon fillet, which she had just bought. Back in Dordrecht - after his training with Rembrandt (1606-1669) in
Amsterdam, Maes made this kind of scenes to learn and fun and to quickly
establish a reputation.
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Portrait of Jacob de Witt
Nicolaes Maas, 1657
Oil on
panel 74,7 x 60,5 cm
Dordrechts Museum
Jacob de Witt was mayor of Dordrecht and the father of Johan and Cornelis de
Witt. Johan became Raeds-pensionaris (President) of the Republic of the Seven
United Provinces and was, together with his brother Cornelis brutally murdered
in the Haque, August 1672, by the followers of the young William III of Orange.
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Self portrait
Nicolaes Maas, c. 1685
Oil on canvas and panel 63 x 50 cm
Dordrechts Museum |
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The eavesdropper
Nicolaes Maas, 1657
Oil on canvas on panel 92.5 x 122 cm
Dordrecht Museum
A rhythm game with looking through different areas, marks this composition.
On Maes's refined way the audience is involved in the show. The girl calls the
audience with her finger to be silence. She has discovered the love couple down
the stairs. She makes the audience part of her secret and thus complicity. Her
finger lifted also to the bust of the Roman goddess Juno's marriage. This
suggests that the adultery is continuing.
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A Woman Spinning
Nicolaes Maas, 1655
Oil on panel
Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam |
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Nicolaes Maes in museums in the United Kingdom

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A Young Boy with His Dog in a Landscape
Nicolaes Maes, 1662
Oil paint on board h368 x w457 mm
Brighton Museum and Art Gallery, Brighton UK |
A little girl rocking a Cradle
Nicholas Maes, c.1655
Oil on panel 40.4 x 32.6 cm
National gallery, London |
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A Woman scraping Parsnips, with a child standing by her
Nicholas Maes,
1655
Oil on panel 35.6 x 29.8 cm
National gallery London |
Interior with a Sleeping Maid and her Mistress (The Idle Servant)
Nicholas Maes,
1655
Oil on panel 70 x 53.3 cm
National gallery, London
The kitchen scene in Maes's painting is complemented by the room beyond,
where figures sit at table. The strong lighting in the foreground shows the
artist's continuing debt to Rembrandt. It highlights the figures of the maid and
the mistress, the standing figure gesturing towards the idle servant with an
array of dishes at her feet and a cat stealing food on the ledge beside her.
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Christ blessing the Children
Nicholas Maes,
1652/53
Oil on canvas 218 x 154 cm
National gallery London
This subject is told in several of the Gospels. Christ, in response to the
complaints of his disciples, justified his blessing the children with the words:
'Suffer little children to come unto me, for of such is the kingdom of heaven'.
New Testament (Matthew 19: 13-15). In the theological debates between Calvinists
and Lutherans against the Anabaptists this text was used to justify infant
baptism. Children, although seemingly innocent and certainly unaware of the
significance of the event, need to be baptised in order to achieve salvation from original sin, with which all humans
come into the world. The composition is focused on Christ's hand placed in
blessing over the head of the girl in the centre. Strong light falls from the
left across her features and illuminates from the side the crowd gathered behind
her. The figure on the extreme left appears to be a portrait, and may well be a
self portrait by Maes. The painting was acquired in 1866 as a Rembrandt, but is
now generally agreed to be an early work by Maes, dating from the early 1650s,
not long after his training with Rembrandt.
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Portrait of an Elderly man in a Black Robe
Nicholas Maes,
1666
Oil on canvas 89.5 x 71.4 cm
National gallery London
The old man represented in this portrait, seated a chair in front of a
curtain that has been pulled to the side, has not been identified. He is wearing
a 'tabbaard', which is a long black gown that is lined with fur. This together
with the book he is holding suggests that he may be scholar.
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Portrait of Jan de Reus
Nicholas Maes,
1670s
Oil on canvas 79 x 62.5 cm
National gallery London
Jan de Reus (about 1600 - 1685) was a Rotterdam silk merchant. He was
burgomaster of Rotterdam eight times, and a director of the Dutch East India
Company from 1658. The identification of the sitter is made by comparison with a
copy of the portrait by Pieter van der Werff.
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Portrait of a Man in a Black Wig
Nicholas Maes,
1680
Oil on canvas 47.6 x 38.7 cm
National gallery London
This is a half-length portrait of an unidentified sitter in an oval surround.
It was formerly attributed to Caspar Netscher, but is now recognised as a work by Maes,
who painted a number of portraits of this type in his later years.
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Lady in black dress
Nicholas Maes
oil on canvas 48.7 x 38.4 cm
Bowes Museum,
County Durham, UK
The subject is shown standing by a narrow arched window through which a
landscape can be seen. She is wearing a black dress with full lace half sleeves
and small ruff. Her right hand rests on a table clutching pink flowers, left arm
across bust. The carnation that the sitter holds in her hand often appears in
marriage portraits as a symbol of fidelity, whereas the roses on the table could
refer to beauty and to the passage of time.
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The Listening Housewife (The Eavesdropper)
Nicolas Maes
Oil on canvas 84. x 70.6 cm
The Wallace collection, London |
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The Virtuous Woman
Nicolas Maes, c. 1655
Oil on canvas 74.7 x 60.5 cm
The Wallace collection, London |
Still Life of Fruit in a formal Garden
Nicolaes Maes, Inscribed: A. Cuyp
oil on canvas; 56 x 72 cm
The Ashmolean museum of art, Oxford
Apart from an early painting of a branch of peaches, this is the only still
life which is generally attributed to Maes. The addition of Cuyp's name was probably
inspired by similarities between this painting and works by Abraham Calraet
which were, at one time, attributed to Cuyp.
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A Man holding a Carnation to a Woman's Nose: An Allegory of
the Sense of Smell
Nicolaes Maes, late 1650s
oil on canvas; 59 x 62 cm
The Ashmolean museum of art, Oxford
This painting must date from before c. 1660 when Maes abandoned his
early career as a painter of genre scenes and religious works and devoted
himself to paintin portraits. The dark, rich colour and heavy brushwork
indicate a debt to Rembandt, with whom Maes is said to have studied in the late
1640s.
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Portrait of a Venerable-looking Old Man
Nicholas Maes, 1666
oil on canvas 87.6 x 69.2 cm
Bowes Museum,
County Durham, UK
The subject of the portrait is a Captain of the Civic Guard of Dordrecht.
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Nicolaes Maes in museums in other Countries of Europe
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Mocking of Christ
Nicolaes Maes, 1650s
The Hermitage St-Petersburg |
Portrait of a Young Woman
Nicolaes Maes, 1678
The Hermitage St-Petersburg |
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Hermanus Amija
Nicolaes Maes,1683
H. : 0.65 m. , L. : 0.53 m
Musée du Louvre, Paris
Husband of Catherine de Vogelaer. Painted around 1683, date of marriage of
the couple. Typical example of aristocratic portraits by Maes executed according
to a standardized formula.
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Catherine de Vogelaer
Nicolaes Maes,1683
H. : 0.65 m. , L. : 0.53 m
Musée du Louvre, Paris
Daughter of a Secretary of the city of Amsterdam, wife of Hermanus Amija.
Painted around 1683, date of marriage of the couple. Typical example of
aristocratic portraits by Maes executed according to a standardized formula.
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Children bathing
Nicolaes Maes, 1683
H. : 0.72 m. , L. : 0.91 m
Musée du Louvre, Paris
The attribution to Maes was sometimes challenged - a little prematurely - to
a close relative of the artist, Justus de Gelder. Starting early, circa 1655/60.
Representation apparently anecdotal but no doubt responsible for some moralizing
allusions to certain keywords related to emblems (the child based on a floating
tree trunk, to illustrate the frailty of existence built on uncertain
foundations, imprudent swimmer who falls into the water because it relies too
much knowledge and neglects any external assistance.
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Portrait of a Woman
Nicolaes Maas,
1666-67
Oil on canvas, 91 x 73 cm
Museo Thyssen-Bornemisza, Madrid |
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Portrait of a Man
Nicolaes Maas,
1666-67
Oil on canvas, 91 x 73 cm
Museo Thyssen-Bornemisza, Madrid |
The naughty drummer boy
Nicolaes Maas,
c. 1655
Oil on canvas, 62 x 66 cm
Museo Thyssen-Bornemisza, Madrid |
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Old Woman Dozing
Nicolaes Maas,
1656
Oil on canvas, 135 x 105 cm
Musées Royaux des Beaux-Arts, Brussels |
Portrait of Four Children
Nicolaes Maes, 1657
Oil on canvas, 150 x 112 cm
Groeningen Museum, Bruges |
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Portrait of a Woman
Nicolaes Maas
Oil on canvas, 89,6 x 71,2 cm
Museum voor Schone Kunsten, Ghent |
Old Woman Peeling Apples
Nicolaes Maas,
c. 1655
Oil on canvas, 5 x 50 cm
Staatliche Museen, Berlin |
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Portrait of a Gentlemen
Nicholas Maes
Oil on canvas 54.6 x 49 cm
Private collection, Dusseldorf |
Portrait of Sara Ingelbrechts (1636-1711)
Nicolaes Maes,1675
Oil on canvas 76,5 x 66 cm
Kunsthistorisches Museum Wien, Gemäldegalerie |
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The Apostle Thomas
Nicolaes Maas,
1656
Oil on canvas
Staatliche Museen, Kassel |
Portrait of Margaretha de Geer, Wife of Jacob Trip
Nicholas Maes,
c. 1660
Oil on canvas, 88 x 68 cm
Museum of Fine Arts, Budapest |
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Portrait of Justus Criex
Nicholas Maes, 1666
Oil on canvas, 109 x 92 cm
Museum of Fine Arts, Budapest |
Christ before Pilate
Nicholas Maes, 1649/50
Oil on canvas, 216 x 174 cm
Museum of Fine Arts, Budapest |
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Portrait of Jaob Trip
Nicholas Maes, c. 1660
Oil on canvas, 88 x 68 cm
Museum of Fine Arts, Budapest |
Nicolaes Maes in museums in the USA
The Lace maker
Nicholas Maes, 1665/60
Oil on canvas; 17 3/4 x 20 3/4 in. (45.1 x 52.7 cm)
Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York |
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Dutch Gentleman
Nicholas Maes
oil on canvas sight 42 1/2 x 33 1/2 in. (107.9 x 85.1 cm
Smithsonian American Art Museum, Washington DC
Formerly attributed to Ferdinand Bol
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An Old Woman Dozing over a Book
Nicolaes Maes, c.
1655
oil on canvas: 82.2 x 67 cm
National galley of art, Washington DC |
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Portrait of a Lady
Nicolaes Maes,
1676
oil on canvas 116 x 91 cm
National galley of art, Washington DC |
Interior with a Dordrecht Family
Nicolaes Maes, 1656
Oil on canvas 112.4 x 121 cm
Norton Simon museum, Pasadena
One of Rembrandt's most renowned students, Nicolaes Maes worked in his native city of
Dordrecht for many years prior to establishing a studio in Amsterdam. He had
begun painting portraits by 1656, the date of the present work. Maes specialized
in domestic scenes and maintained a very individual color scheme throughout his
work. The lacquered finishes of black and brown contrast luminously with the
clear reds visible on the fruit and the mother's dress. Strong contrasts of
light and dark are another prominent feature in Maes' technique and recall his
tutelage under Rembrandt.
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Agatha Bicker
Nicolaes Maes, c. 1675
Oil on panel oval 37.5 x 24.8 cm
Norton Simon museum, Pasadena
Dirck Alewijn was the Sheriff of Amsterdam, a title that was more honorary
than active. His luxuriant wig and his wife's fine pearls and dress attest to
their affluence.
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Dirck Frederiksz Alewijn
Nicolaes Maes, c. 1675
Oil on panel oval 43.2 x 30.5 cm
Norton Simon museum, Pasadena
Dirck Alewijn was the Sheriff of Amsterdam, a title that was more honorary
than active. His luxuriant wig, and the fine pearls and dress of his wife,
Agatha Bicker, attest to their affluence.
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Portrait of a Lady by a Fountain
Nicolaes Maes, c. 1665
oil on canvas 85 x 69 cm
Carnegie Museum of Art, Pittsburgh USA |
Portrait of a Lady
Nicolaes Maes, 1675
opaque water-base paint mounted on vellum mounted on cardboard 55 x 43 cm
Carnegie Museum of Art, Pittsburgh USA |
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Adoration of the Shepherds
Nicholas Maes, 1660
Oil on canvas 47 x 12 x 37 x 34 in.
The Getty museum, Los Angeles |
Portrait of Helena van Heuvel
Nicolaes Maes, c. 1675/79
Oil on canvas 44.3 x 34.3 cm
Museum of Fine Arts, Boston |
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Portrait of Mary Stuart
Nicolaes Maes, 1677
Oil on canvas 26-5/8 x 22-1/4 in
Timken museum of art, San Diego
By 1660, Nicolaes Maes, Rembrandt's best-known pupil, developed a fluid
style of painting that readily lent itself to portraiture.
This portrait may be
of Mary Stuart, daughter of James, Duke of York, and Anne Hyde. In 1677, the
year this work was painted, fifteen-year-old Mary Stuart married William III of
Orange, Stadtholder
of the United Provinces of the Netherlands. She later became
Mary II when he became William III. They ruled England and were popularly known
as William and Mary.
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Portrait of Anna Hofstreek
Nicolaes Maes, 1674
Oil on canvas 114.9 x 92 cm
Ringling Museum
of Art, Florida |
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The account Keeper
Nicolaes Maes, 1656
oil on canvas 66 x 53.7 cm
Saint Louis art museum, St-Louis USA |
The Lacemaker
Nicolaes Maes, 1655
oil on oak 57.1 x 43.8 cm
National gallery of Canada, Ottawa
The subject of the lacemaker is frequently found in Dutch painting of this
period; Maes painted no fewer than twelve examples. The intense concentration of
the woman and the organized setting serve to underline the virtues of
domesticity. The artist's use of chiaroscuro ¿ distributing the light and shade
to focus on the figure ¿ reveals the influence of his teacher, Rembrandt.
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Nicolaes Maes in museums in Private collections
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Family Portrait
Nicholas Maes, c. 1675/76
Oil on canvas 153.1 x 170.2 cm Private collection
On tour around the world |
Portrait of Gentlemen, Three-Quarter Length, in a Brown Tunic with a Red Cloak
in a Wooded Landscape, at Sunset
Nicolaes Maes, 1676
oil on canvas 54.9 x 46 cm
Private collection
In this accomplished portrait, Nicolaes Maes presents the viewer with a
confident young man with a disarmingly open gaze and jaunty demeanour. Although
painted centuries ago, the portrait possesses a powerful immediacy and timeless
appeal.
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Portrait of Hendrick Meulenaer
Nicolaes Maes
Canvas, 43.5 x 32.5 cm
Private collection |
Portrait of an Unknown Woman, probably Anna or Maria Meulenaer
Nicolaes Maes
Canvas, 43.5 x 31 cm
Private collection |
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A Portrait of a young Man in an orange and gold Tunic with a
blue Cloak in a feigned Oval
Nicolaes Maes
Oil on Canvas 18 x 14 inches (45.7 x 35.5 cm
Private collection |
Eavesdropper with a Scolding Woman
Nicolaes Maas,
1655
Oil on panel, 46,3 x 72,2 cm
Private collection |
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Dordrecht 1642 - Stockholm 1692
Cornelis van der Meulen was in the fifties a pupil of Samuel van Hoogstraten.
After a few years he had worked in Dordrecht, he departed in 1679 to Stockholm.
There he remained until his death working as a court painter of the Swedish
king. The biggest part of his work is still in Sweden. Van der Meulen, the
creator of a series of copy paintings "trompe l'oeil" pieces and Still-lifes.
There is also a view of Stockholm from him, that is constructed with great
precision. Some have argued that using an optical measuring instrument as the
Camera Obscura was formed because of this painting.
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Trompe l'oeil letter bord
Cornelis van der
Meulen
doek op board 48 x 58,2 cm
Dordrechts museum
What is real and what is painted? Because the optical illusion this type of
fraud is called "trompe l'oeil.
The theme of the trompe l'oeil letterbox has largely its origin from Dordrecht,
in which Samuel van Hoogstraten played a large role. In his painters-book he
advised students to focusing on the appearance of flat objects on flat operated
subjects, because ‘ook eer meede ingeleit, wanneer vorsten of vorstinnen
bedroogen wierden.’ (when more experienced you can even trigger Royalty).Van der Meulen followed the advice of his mentor and as court painter in
Sweden e had indeed princes among its admirers.
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A Vanitas Still Life o a Skull, a guttering Candle, a
tortoiseshell Mirror, a Book, a Statue and a pack of Cards
Cornelis van der Meulen, 1688
oil on canvas 58.4 x 47.3 cm
Private collection |
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Dordrecht 1907 - Dordrecht 1981
After several jobs as a factory worker and an advertising artist, Daan
Mühlhausen began painting around 1930. As an example he used the Dordrechts
paintings in the Museum. In addition, he had important contacts with Cor Noltee,
A. P. DishTrak, M.P. Reus and Roland Larijs. Especially with Noltee he often
painted outside and he made small paintings "to remember the things that I
wanted to make at home." He painted naturalistic, in a manner as he looked
around, in sweeping and color keys. Together with the other painters he belonged
to a group that is being described as Dordtse Impressionists.
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Atelier at Pictura, Dordrecht
Daan Mühlhaus, 1954
paper, tempera, 100 x 90 cm
Dordrechts Museum |
Place des Pyramides, Paris
Daan Muhlhaus
oil on canvas 40 x 50 cm
Private collection |
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View on Paris
Daan
Mühlhaus
Oil on canvas
Private collection |
Rue des Capucines, Parijs
Daan
Mühlhaus
Oil on canvas 70 x 100 cm
Private collection |
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Winter on a canal in Amsterdam
Daan Muhlhaus
Oil on canvas 60.5 x 80 cm
Private collection |
Rotterdam, the Rijnhaven seen from the Nieuwe Waterweg
Daan
Mühlhaus, 1960
Oil on canvas 80 x 100 cm
Private collection
het schilderij zou in opdracht van
een sleepvaartrederij zijn
geschilderd
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Herengracht-Reguliersgracht, Amsterdam
Daan Mühlhaus
oil on canvas 61 x 80 cm
Private collection |
Shipping by Dordrecht
Daan Mühlhaus
oil on canvas 60 x 80 cm
Private collection |
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View on the Leeuwenbrug, Rotterdam, with Oude
Maasbrug in the background
Daan Mühlhaus
oil on canvas 50 x 80 cm
Private collection |
Flower market at the Oude Delft
Daan Mühlhaus
oil on canvas 60 x 80 cm
Private collection |
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Place de l'Opera, Paris
Daan Mühlhaus
oil on canvas 60 x 50 cm
Private collection |
Boulevardd Saint Michel, Paris
Daan Mühlhaus, 1957
oil on canvas 50.5 x 60 cm
Private collection |
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Next : Famous painters from Dordrecht, Part 15
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