Roelandt Savery (Kortrijk 1576-1639 Utrecht)
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Roelandt Savery (Kortrijk 1576-1639 Utrecht)

A stag, deers, herons, goats, parrots and other animals in a forest

Details
Roelandt Savery (Kortrijk 1576-1639 Utrecht)
A stag, deers, herons, goats, parrots and other animals in a forest
signed 'ROELANT SAVERY' (lower left)
oil on canvas
29 7/8 x 42 7/8 in. (75.9 x 108.9 cm.)
Provenance
Siret collection; sale, Galerie Georges Giroux, Brussels, 15 December 1930, lot 74.
with Galerie Filippo Franco, Brussels, from whom acquired by the present owner in 1981.
Literature
K.J. Müllenmeister, Roelant Savery - Die Gemälde mit kritischem Oevrekatalog, Freren, 1988, p. 249, no. 113, pl. 19.
Exhibited
Cologne, Wallraf-Richartz Museum, Roelant Savery in seiner Zeit (1576-1639), 1985, no. 72.
Special notice
No VAT will be charged on the hammer price, but VAT at 17.5% will be added to the buyer's premium which is invoiced on a VAT inclusive basis

Lot Essay

Of Flemish origin, Roelandt Savery moved to Haarlem with his parents in about 1585, but by 1602 he had settled in Amsterdam with his brother, Jacob, who died the following year. Roelandt is known to have entered the service of Emperor Rudolph II in Prague by 1604, a position he retained until the Emperor's death in February 1613. There he joined a group of international artists that the Emperor had gathered around him, including Bartholomeus Spranger, Hans Hoffman, Matthus Gundelach, and Jacob Hoefnagel. His interest in animals and their natural environment was heightened by a series of sketches commissioned by Rudolph of Savery's travels in Southern Germany and Bohemia, and this preoccupation with transcribing nature accurately with his pen and on canvas engaged Savery even after his departure from Prague towards the end of 1613.

Müllenmeister, op. cit., dates the present work to circa 1624, following the artist's departure from Amsterdam to Utrecht in 1619. Characteristic of the artist's ability are the finely detailed ferns and plants, the masterful characterisation of the animals (described by Müllenmeister as 'den hervorragend erfassten Tieren', loc. cit.), and the jewel-like play of light falling on the distant view.

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