JAN VAN GOYEN (LEIDEN 1596-1656 THE HAGUE)
JAN VAN GOYEN (LEIDEN 1596-1656 THE HAGUE)
JAN VAN GOYEN (LEIDEN 1596-1656 THE HAGUE)
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PROPERTY FROM A GERMAN PRIVATE COLLECTION
JAN VAN GOYEN (LEIDEN 1596-1656 THE HAGUE)

A coastal scene with boats drawn up on a beach by a village

Details
JAN VAN GOYEN (LEIDEN 1596-1656 THE HAGUE)
A coastal scene with boats drawn up on a beach by a village
signed and dated 'I.V. GOIEN. / 1623' (lower left)
oil on panel
22 7⁄8 x 41 ¾ in. (58 x 106 cm.)
Provenance
Hendrik Verschuuring (c.1695-1769); his sale (†), Rietmulder, The Hague, 17 September 1770, lot 68 (45 guilders to Bergeon).
Ernst Glaser, Berlin (according to Beck, loc. cit.).
Anonymous sale; Hermann Ball and Paul Graupe, Berlin, 26 September 1930, lot 24 (10,500 DM).
with Duits, Amsterdam, 1933.
Anonymous sale [Property of a Gentleman]; Sotheby's, London, 8 July 1992, lot 87.
with Kunsthandel P. de Boer, 1992-3.
with Richard Green, London, 1996, where presumably acquired by the grandfather of the present owners.
Literature
C. Hofstede de Groot, A Catalogue Raisonné of the Works of the Most Eminent Dutch Painters of the Seventeenth Century, London, 1927, VIII, p. 280, no. 1118c.
H. van de Waal, Jan van Goyen, Amsterdam, 1941, p. 9, illustrated.
A. Dobrzycka, Jan van Goyen: 1595-1656, Poznan, 1966, pp. 84 and 149, no. 6, fig. 14.
W. Stechow, Dutch Landscape Painting of the Seventeenth Century, London, 1966, pp. 102-103, 206, note 8, fig. 200.
H.-U. Beck, Jan van Goyen 1596-1656, Ein Œuvreverzeichnis, II, Amsterdam, 1973, p. 109, no. 222, illustrated.

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Lucy Speelman
Lucy Speelman Junior Specialist, Head of Day Sale

Lot Essay

This lively scene is an extremely early work from Jan van Goyen’s Leiden period (1618-32). Fewer than ten paintings by van Goyen bearing dates before 1623, the year inscribed on this panel, are known. The young artist had returned to his native Leiden in 1618 following a year-long apprenticeship in the Haarlem studio of his sixth master, Esaias van de Velde, under whose instruction he made remarkable progress. Van de Velde was six years van Goyen’s senior and had been the first Dutch painter to abandon the mannerisms of the Flemish style in favour of more naturalistic landscape views. His tuition had a lasting impact on van Goyen that remained palpable into the second half of the 1620s. Van de Velde’s approach is principally felt in van Goyen’s treatment of space and atmosphere as well as his fluid, fluent handling of paint.

In his early landscapes from 1623 until about 1626, van Goyen regularly adopted an elongated rectangular format, which provided a panoramic setting for his narrative content. His characterful figures in these works play an unusually prominent role and are painted on top of the finished landscape, which he deliberately structured to act as a stage to be filled with staffage. In this respect, his landscapes emulate artists of the preceding generation, including Jan Brueghel the Elder and Hendrick Avercamp. Indeed, the most prominent figural group in van Goyen’s painting includes a Traveller, viewed in profile with a young child on her back, reading a man’s palm. A similar group features can be found in the central left foreground in a painting by Avercamp datable to a few years earlier (fig. 1).

While water plays a central role in van Goyen’s early paintings of this type, this is one of only two examples depicting an open coastline (for the other, identified as a view of Scheveningen, see Beck, op. cit., II, no. 244a; III, no. 244a, illustrated). More frequently, he depicted inland waterways with ferries (see, for example, another work dated 1623, Beck, op. cit., II, no. 219). This nascent interest in coastal scenes presages the numerous beach scenes van Goyen would paint between 1632 and 1653 (see Beck, op. cit., II, nos. 923-967a).

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