Gerrit Adriaensz. Berckheyde (1638-1698)
Christie's charges a Buyer's premium calculated at… 顯示更多 THE PROPERTY OF THE LATE K.F. WETZLAR, AMSTERDAM. (Lots 17 and 77-80)
Gerrit Adriaensz. Berckheyde (1638-1698)

A view of Haarlem with St. Bavo's Cathedral

細節
Gerrit Adriaensz. Berckheyde (1638-1698)
A view of Haarlem with St. Bavo's Cathedral
signed (?) 'gerrit Berck.Heyde' (lower left)
oil on canvas
66.2 x 91.8 cm.
出版
C. Lawrence, Gerrit Berckheyde, 1991, p. 37, under note 35, letter w.
注意事項
Christie's charges a Buyer's premium calculated at 23.205% of the hammer price for each lot with a value up to €110,000. If the hammer price of a lot exceeds €110,000 then the premium for the lot is calculated at 23.205% of the first €110,000 plus 11.9% of any amount in excess of €110,000. Buyer's Premium is calculated on this basis for each lot individually.
拍場告示
Please note that the signature has been tested by an outside restorer who deems it to be contemporary with the picture but strengthened at a later date. The remnants of another Berckheyde signature are just discernible to the left of the first signature.

拍品專文

The staffage is by Anthonie Palamedesz., called Stevers (1601-1673).

Gerrit Berckheyde painted numerous views of St. Bavo's between 1665 and 1696. The magnificent building featured in his work for various reasons: most importantly, however, Haarlem was Berckheyde's native city and also an important commercial town during the Netherlands' great period of expansion, and the monumental architecture of St. Bavo embodied the town's wealth and its religious identity. Many of Berckheyde's Haarlem paintings were based on Samuel Ampzing's Beschrijving ende Lof der Stad Haerlem of 1628, a topographical history that contains etchings of Haarlem's prominent features. Berckheyde's dependance on these prints is reflected in his paintings, certain conventions in his staffage deriving from them.

The present lot closely resembles the Grote markt with St. Bavo's, Haarlem, signed and dated 1696, on canvas and measuring 69.5 x 90.5 cm., that is stored in the Frans Hals Museum in Haarlem; the soft yellow light and the sharp contrasts and silhouetted façades appear in both paintings. The monumental expression of the church is further enhanced by the vast square of the Grote markt, depicted relatively empty on this occasion. Considering the similarities between the two paintings, the present lot may be dated to somewhere around 1696. After 1674, Berckheyde changed his compositions to a different view of St. Bavo's, his angle shifting to the far west of the Grote Markt, thereby including the porch of Haarlem's Town Hall.

It is interesting, given the conjunction with lot 74 in the present sale, to note Lawrence's observation that: 'It has been suggested that Berckheyde may have occasionally paired representations of the Amsterdam Town Hall with other symbols of national and civic pride, producing pendant 'portraits' of it with paintings of St. Bavo's in Haarlem.." (op. cit., p. 35).

We are grateful to Professor Cynthia Lawrence for her help in cataloguing this lot.