ANTWERP SCHOOL, CIRCA 1540
ANTWERP SCHOOL, CIRCA 1540
ANTWERP SCHOOL, CIRCA 1540
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ANTWERP SCHOOL, CIRCA 1540
7 More
Property from a Midwest Collection
ANTWERP SCHOOL, CIRCA 1540

A triptych: the central panel: The Holy Family with an angel; left wing: Saint Catherine of Alexandria; right wing: Saint Barbara

Details
ANTWERP SCHOOL, CIRCA 1540
A triptych: the central panel: The Holy Family with an angel; left wing: Saint Catherine of Alexandria; right wing: Saint Barbara
oil on panel
central panel: 8 5⁄8 x 6 ½ in. (21.8 x 16.5 cm.); each wing: 8 5⁄8 x 3 1⁄8 in. (21.8 x 7.8 cm.); framed: 15 3⁄8 x 16 ½ (39 x 41.9 cm.)
Provenance
(Probably) Alexander Hamilton, 10th Duke of Hamilton (1767-1852), and by descent to his grandson,
William Alexander Louis Stephen, 12th Duke of Hamilton and 9th Duke of Brandon (1845-1895), Hamilton Palace, Lothian; his sale, Christie's, London, 8 July 1882, lot 1064, as Van Eyck, (178 gns. to the following),
with Agnew's, London and Manchester.
with Mori, Paris.
John Edward Taylor, Esq. (1830-1905), London; his deceased sale, Christie's, London, 5 July 1912, lot 41, as Adrian Ysenbrant (520 gns. to Bacri).
with Wildenstein, New York, by 30 June 1925.
with Julius H. Weitzner, New York, 1938, as Isenbrandt.
Mr. and Mrs. Leo S. Bing; [Property from the Collection of Mr. and Mrs. Leo S. Bing], Christie's, New York, 23 January 2004, lot 16, where acquired by the present owner.
Exhibited
Los Angeles, Los Angeles County Museum, 25 January-27 July 1962, on loan, as Adriaen Isenbrandt.

Brought to you by

Taylor Alessio
Taylor Alessio Junior Specialist, Head of Part II

Lot Essay

The prime version of the present painting is by Marcellus Coffermans and was previously in the Bass Museum of Art, Miami Beach, Florida (see Sotheby's, New York, 6 February 2025, lot 304). There are at least fourteen versions by Coffermans and his workshop recorded, attesting to the popularity of the composition. The Virgin sits enthroned in the central panel, dressed in crimson robes, and holds the Christ Child, who reaches for a bunch of grapes - foreshadowing his Eucharistic sacrifice. Seated behind the Virgin, a bespectacled Saint Joseph looks up, as if interrupted while reading from a book resting on a plinth. The rolling landscape beyond unites the three panels. Unlike the larger Bass triptych, which includes Saints Michael and Bartholomew, the Holy Family is here flanked by Saints Catherine of Alexandria and Barbara, perhaps reflecting the wishes of the painting's unknown first owners.

The frame is stamped with the mark of the talented New York City frame maker Maurice Grieve, known as the 'Master of the Roses' for his superior woodworking skills, evident in this elegant frame's openwork and deep-relief carving. Grieve collaborated with the renowned dealer and tastemaker Joseph Duveen to create frames for some of his most illustrious clients, including the Vanderbilts and the Astors. He famously provided the frame for Thomas Gainsborough's The Blue Boy (The Huntington, San Marino, inv. no. 21.1). In addition to frames, his carving can be seen on the ceiling of Grottesman Hall at the New York Public Library and in the homes of Henry Clay Frick and Andrew Carnegie.

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