Marten Ryckaert (Antwerp 1587-1631)
Marten Ryckaert (Antwerp 1587-1631)

A rocky landscape with figures by an iron foundry, a river and houses on the bank beyond

Details
Marten Ryckaert (Antwerp 1587-1631)
A rocky landscape with figures by an iron foundry, a river and houses on the bank beyond
oil on panel
11 7/8 x 19 7/8 in. (30.2 x 50.2 cm.)
Provenance
Vasily Aleksandrovich Shchavinsky (1868-1924), Saint Petersburg, by 1917.
Mme. Ilse Vögler von Martius [or Martin], Hattingen, Ruhr, by 1952.
Private collection, Germany.
Anonymous sale; Dorotheum, Vienna, 12 October 2011, lot 445 (where acquired by the present owner).
Literature
P.P. Semenov-Tyan-Shansky and V.A. Shchavinsky, eds., ???????? ?????? ?.?. ?????????? [The Collection of V.A. Shchavinsky], Petrograd [Saint Petersburg], 1917, no. 117, as 'Lucas van Valckenborch'.
R.E. Évrard, Les artistes et les usines à fer, Liege, 1955, p. 24, fig. 14, as 'Joachim Patinir'.
W. Braunfels, Industrielle Frühzeit im Gemälde: Erzbergbau und Eisenhütte in der europäischen Malerei 1500-1800, Düsseldorf, 1957, pp. 24ff.
W. Salewski, Das Eisen in der Kunst: Eine Auswahl von Gemälden und Aquarellen aus früher Zeit, Düsseldorf, 1961, album II.
J.-R. Maréchal, Zur Fru¨hgeschichte der Metallurgie:Considérations sur la métallurgie préhistorique, Lammersdorf über Aachen, 1962, as 'Joachim Patinir'.
J.-R. Maréchal, Reflections upon prehistoric metallurgy: a research based upon scientific methods, Lammersdorf über Aachen, 1963, as 'Joachim Patinir'.
A. Wied, Lucas and Marten van Valckenborch, Freren, 1990, p. 199, no. 131, as incorrectly attributed to 'Lucas van Valckenborch'.
Der Märker: Landeskundliche Zeitschrift für den Bereich der ehem. Grafschaft Mark und den Märkischen Kreis, XLI, no. 3, May-June 1992, illustrated on the cover.
R. Doonan and A. Williams, ‘Help needed!’, HMS News (Historical Metallurgy Society), LXXVI, Autumn 2010, p. 8, fig. 1, as 'Joachim Patinir'.
R. Doonan, A. Williams, E. Truffaut, K. Boespflug, V. Serneels and P. Vigor, ‘HMS Members Solve Mystery?’, HMS News (Historical Metallurgy Society), LXXVII, Spring 2011, pp. 4-5, figs. 1 and 3, as 'Joachim Patinir'.
Exhibited
Düsseldorf, Eisen und Stahl, 1952.
Ludwigshafen am Rhein, Bürgermeister-Ludwig-Reichert-Haus, Forschung und Technik in der Kunst, 1 April-31 May 1965, no. 29, as ‘Joachim Patenier, circa 1530-1540.'

Brought to you by

Emily Harris
Emily Harris

Check the condition report or get in touch for additional information about this

If you wish to view the condition report of this lot, please sign in to your account.

Sign in
View condition report

Lot Essay

Long claimed to be ‘the oldest painting of a blast furnace and finery in Europe’ (Historical Metallurgy Society, 2011, op. cit.), this beautifully-preserved panel has been extensively published in the specialist literature concerning the history of industrial processes and their depiction in art. Starting with its inclusion in the landmark exhibition Eisen und Stahl (‘Iron and Steel’), a showcase of the history, culture and achievements of the steel industry organised in the German industrial cradle of Düsseldorf in 1952, the work has attracted the attention of all the major authors on the subject. Évrard notes that the depicted furnace is a pyramidal tower with a broad, flat opening, some five or six metres high (to judge by the relative height of the figures). It is built of hewn stone, with a stone stairway built up against one side, which provides access to the inlet at the top (‘gueulard’).

The ‘Walloon Method’ is one of the most important developments in the history of the industrial production of iron, named after the Walloon region of present-day Belgium. The Method consisted of making pig iron in a blast furnace, followed by refinement in a finery forge. The process was devised in the Liège region and soon spread into France, the Low Countries and thence to England, finding employment there before the end of the fifteenth century. In the early-seventeenth century, it was taken to Röslagen in Sweden by Louis de Geer, who attracted Walloon ironmakers to the new works there; iron made there by the Walloon Method was known in England as oregrounds iron, and by the eighteenth century was regarded as the best grade of iron available. The technical breakthrough came at a moment when all eyes were on the iron industry. European rulers sent their armies far and wide in the defence of competing territorial claims both on the Continent and, with the discovery of the Americas in 1492, in the New World, and with the technology and thus the terms of battle rapidly changing, all the players were engaged in a bitterly contested arms race – stronger armour or more fearsome firepower could give the winning side just the edge it needed. The invention of a process which produced higher-grade iron in Wallonia placed the region in the limelight. Possession of the Wallonian territories came to be a valuable asset. In the early-sixteenth century, the Holy Roman Emperor Charles V took pains to secure the rocky plains of Wallonia, rich in natural resources and the technical skills of its inhabitants.

Vasily Aleksandrovich Shchavinsky, in whose collection this work was recorded in 1917, was one of the most important collectors of Western art active in Saint Petersburg before the Revolution. A close friend of Semenov-Tyan-Shansky, whose celebrated collection entered the Hermitage (they collaborated on the catalogue of the Shavinsky’s collection, op. cit.), Shchavinsky wished for his collection to enter the museums of Kiev, although this dream was never entirely fulfilled.

More from Old Master & British Paintings Day Sale

View All
View All