FRIESIAN SCHOOL, 1595
FRIESIAN SCHOOL, 1595
FRIESIAN SCHOOL, 1595
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PROPERTY OF A LADY
FRIESIAN SCHOOL, 1595

Portrait of Jancke van Douma van Langweer van Oldenboorn (1568⁄9-1631), three-quarter-length, in a yellow doublet, resting his hand on a hat

Details
FRIESIAN SCHOOL, 1595
Portrait of Jancke van Douma van Langweer van Oldenboorn (1568⁄9-1631), three-quarter-length, in a yellow doublet, resting his hand on a hat
oil on canvas
38 7⁄8 x 29 3⁄8 in. (98.7 x 74.6 cm.)
inscribed 'ÆTATIS SVÆ 26 / ANo1595' (upper right), with the sitter's coat of arms (upper left)
Provenance
(Probably) by inheritance to the sitter's great-nephew,
Sjuk Sjuks van Burmania (1597-1650), and by descent in the van Burmania family at Martena Castle, Kornjum, Friesland.
Anonymous sale; Sotheby's, London, 8 April 1987, lot 112 (part lot).
Anonymous sale; Christie's, London, 1 March 1991, lot 115 (part lot), as 'Attributed to The Friesian-Groningen Master (active 1595-1626)'.
with Anthony Mould, London, where acquired by the present owner.
Literature
E.W. Moes, Iconographia Batava, Amsterdam, 1897, I, p. 245, no. 2116.1.
A. Wassenbergh, De portretkunst in Friesland in de zeventiende eeuw, Lochen, 1967, p. 17, no. 5, as 'The Friesian-Groningen Master'.

Brought to you by

Lucy Speelman
Lucy Speelman Junior Specialist, Head of Day Sale

Lot Essay

A portrait of the present sitter's younger sister, Cnier van Douma van Langweer van Oldenboorn (1576⁄7-1651), was sold in these Rooms, 8 June 2023, lot 84 (Fig. 1). Jancke died unmarried, and the portraits were most probably inherited by the children of Cnier’s son, Sjuk Sjuks van Burmania (1597-1650), who had died a year before his mother. For centuries they descended through the family at Martena Castle in Kornjum, together with about thirty other portraits of the Burmania family, and remained together until sold separately following their appearance at auction in 1991. A nineteenth-century pastel copy of Jancke's portrait is now in the Fries Museum in Leeuwarden. Friesian portraits from the years around 1600 elude secure attribution, as no signed examples are documented.

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