PAULUS POTTER (ENKHUIZEN 1625-1654 AMSTERDAM)
PAULUS POTTER (ENKHUIZEN 1625-1654 AMSTERDAM)
PAULUS POTTER (ENKHUIZEN 1625-1654 AMSTERDAM)
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Property from the Estate of Ambassador J. William Middendorf II, Rhode Island
PAULUS POTTER (ENKHUIZEN 1625-1654 AMSTERDAM)

Two cows next to a pollarded tree, a goat and other cows in the landscape beyond

Details
PAULUS POTTER (ENKHUIZEN 1625-1654 AMSTERDAM)
Two cows next to a pollarded tree, a goat and other cows in the landscape beyond
signed and dated 'Pau̇lu̇s./ Potter. f. 1649' (lower left, on the base of the wall, partially strengthened)
oil on panel
11 7⁄8 x 12 7⁄8 in. (30.3 x 32.7 cm.)
Provenance
Baron Nicolas Massias (1764-1848), by 1815; his sale, Laneuville and Lacoste, 13 December 1825, lot 88 (2,801 FF).
François-Benjamin-Marie Delessert (1780-1868); his deceased sale, Hotel Delessert, on the premises, Paris, 15-16 March 1869, lot 70 (10,000 FF).
Private Collection, Switzerland, before 1950, and by descent to,
Rodolphe Hottinger, Geneva, by whom sold,
Anonymous sale [Property of a Swiss Collector]; Sotheby's, New York, 3 October 1996, lot 121, as dated '16(?)5', where acquired by the seller at the following,
Anonymous sale [Property from an American Collection]; Sotheby's, New York, 4 June 2009, lot 28.
Literature
C.P. Landon, ed., Annales du Musée et de L'École Moderne des Beaux-Arts. Seconde Collection: Galerie de M. Massias, Paris, 1815, pp. 88-89, pl. 42.
C. Blanc, Histoire des Peintres de Toutes les Écoles, Paris, 1861, II, p. 16, no. 67, as 'une vache noire et blanche debout; une vache rousse couchée. Dans le fond, un mouton noir et d'autres vaches'.
T. van Westrheene, Paulus Potter: Sa Vie et ses Œuvres, The Hague, 1867, p. 164, no. 66, as 'Prairie avec une vache blanche et noire debout, une vache rousse couchée. Dans le fond un mouton noir et d'autres vaches'.
C. Hofstede de Groot, A Catalogue Raisonné of the works of the Most Eminent Dutch Painters of the Seventeenth Century based on the work of John Smith, London, 1912, IV, p. 599, no. 21.
T. Posada Kubissa, Pintura holandesa en el Museo Nacional del Prado: Catálogo Razonado, Madrid, 2009, p. 114, under no. 45.
Engraved
F. Soyer, 1815.

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Taylor Alessio
Taylor Alessio Associate Vice President, Associate Specialist Head of Part II

Lot Essay

Paulus Potter’s images of cattle elevate ordinary subject matter beyond literal transcription of the Dutch countryside into quietly majestic paintings with profound national significance. In seventeenth-century Holland, cows became emblems not only of the strength of the Dutch economy, through their association with cattle farming and the dairy industry, but also of the well-being of the Dutch nation itself, serving as patriotic symbols of prosperity, fertility and plenty against the backdrop of the Republic’s struggle for independence from Spanish Rule. Potter combined this native subject matter with a warm, suffused light, influenced by Dutch artists who had travelled to Italy. Especially following the example of Pieter van Laer, Potter immersed his depictions of his local countryside with brilliant light effects, here visible in the strong light cast over the cattle, picking up the highlights of their hair, and the warm glow which pervades the landscape.

At the time of the 1996 sale, the date of the present work was illegible and assumed to be 1645. The picture has since been cleaned and is clearly dated 1649. The work therefore precedes a comparable painting with the same arrangement of cows dated 1652 (Madrid, Museo del Prado, inv. no. P002131). A drawing of a standing cow in the Amsterdam Historical Museum traditionally attributed to Paulus’s father, Pieter Symonsz Potter, but thought to be by Paulus himself, has previously been published as a study for the cow on the left of the Prado painting and clearly also informed this picture (B. Broos, in Paulus Potter: Paintings, drawings and etchings, exhibition catalogue, Zwolle, 1994, p. 178, no. 42). On this basis, the date of the drawing has been assumed to predate 1652, but the emergence of the present work suggests that it must in fact predate 1649.

The 1640s was a seminal decade for Potter, during which the artist created some of his finest paintings. After 1643, he moved away from history subjects and increasingly turned his attention to the Dutch countryside, employing greater naturalism in his works and more focused subject matter. The lower vantage point, attention to the cattle, and continuous landscape stretching towards the distant horizon in this work are all typical of a group of paintings made by Potter in the late 1640s, including Two Cows and a Bull of 1647 (Chicago, Art Institute), Three Cows of 1648 (Montpellier, Musée Fabre) and Bull with two Cows in a Meadow of 1649 (Royal Collection, Buckingham Palace).

A note on the provenance
An engraving in the 1815 catalogue of Baron Nicolas Massias’s collection allows us to reunite the work with its earlier provenance for the first time in recent history. Massias was a French diplomat, colonel, philosopher and author who amassed an impressive collection of Old Master Paintings, including Correggio’s Virgin and Child with the Young Saint John the Baptist (Art Institute of Chicago), Profile Portrait of a Young Lady, now given to Piero del Pollaiuolo (Berlin, Gemäldegalerie), and works attributed to Andrea del Sarto, Leonardo da Vinci, Albrecht Dürer, Peter Paul Rubens, and Anthony van Dyck (for further information on Massias's collection see V. Chenal and F. Hueber, eds., 'Le cabinet du Baron Nicolas Massias', in Histoire des collections à Genève du XVIe au XIXe siècle, Geneva, 2011, n.p.). Potter received high praise in Charles-Paul Landon’s catalogue of Massias's collection for his naturalism, refinement and colouring: ‘quel naturel dans tout ce qu’il touche! quelle finesse, quelle transparence de coloris et quelle vigueur de ton et d’effet!’ ('What naturalness in everything he touches! What finesse, what transparency of color, and what vigor of tone and effect!'; op. cit., p. 89). The painting was subsequently recorded in the 1869 estate sale of banker Baron François-Benjamin-Marie Delessert, who possessed one of the best-known collections of cabinet pictures in Paris.

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