Petrus van Schendel (Terheijden 1806-1870 Brussels)
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Petrus van Schendel (Terheijden 1806-1870 Brussels)

A moonlit vegetable market on De grote markt, The Hague

Details
Petrus van Schendel (Terheijden 1806-1870 Brussels)
A moonlit vegetable market on De grote markt, The Hague
signed and dated 'P. van Schendel 1855' (lower left)
oil on panel
64.4 x 48.8 cm.
Provenance
with C. van Waegeningh, Düsseldorf.
Literature
J.M.M. de Meere, Petrus van Schendel (1806-1870). Een leven tussen licht en donker, Leiden, 2012, p. 159, no. 275.
Special notice
'' ! '' Lots Imported from outside the EU. The buyer''s premium is 37.75% incl. VAT over the first €20,000, plus 31.7% incl. VAT of the hammer price between €20,001 and €800.000, plus 22.02% incl. VAT of any amount in excess of 800.000.

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Kimberley Oldenburg
Kimberley Oldenburg

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Lot Essay

As Dr. Jan de Meere kindly pointed out, the present composition is the result of at least 4 known studio experiments in paints and technique to accomplish the outstanding use of lightfall visible in this work. These studies were executed in the 1850's and were introduced to the market after the Artists' death in 1870, in some cases with later applied signatures.

Petrus van Schendel studied at the Academy of Antwerp under the tutelage of Jan van Bree. Blending the Romantic with the Neo-Classical, he specialized in nocturnal Dutch market scenes where he explored the subtle and theatrical effects of candle and lamplight on the human face and body. He was a member of the Rijksakademie in Amsterdam and of the Rotterdam society Arti Sacrum.

Van Schendel was clearly influenced by the 17th Century northern masters of light, collectively known as the Utrecht Caravaggisti. This group, comprised of Gerrit van Honthorst (1592-1656), Hendrick ter Brugghen (1588-1629) and Dirck van Baburen (1594-1624), traveled to Rome at the beginning of the 17th Century and became entranced with the work of Caravaggio (1573-1610). The Utrecht Caravaggisti transformed Caravaggio's revolutionary patterns of natural light and shadow into economical and powerful compositions, heightened by their personal styles to create dramatic areas of contrasting light and dark. This movement had an important impact on Dutch painting and was more than just a local phenomenon. It laid the groundwork for subsequent artistic developments throughout Northern Europe and culminated two centuries later in the intricate studies of nocturnal light in the paintings of Petrus van Schendel who was named Monsieur Chandelle by the French.

We wish to thank Dr. Jan de Meere for his kind assistance in cataloguing the present lot.

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