MELCHIOR D'HONDECOETER (UTRECHT 1636-1695 AMSTERDAM)
MELCHIOR D'HONDECOETER (UTRECHT 1636-1695 AMSTERDAM)
MELCHIOR D'HONDECOETER (UTRECHT 1636-1695 AMSTERDAM)
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PROPERTY FROM THE COLLECTION OF THE HON. PATRICK AND LADY AMABEL LINDSAY (LOTS 5, 26 & 33)Lots 5, 26 and 33, with two outstanding fourteenth-century Italian illuminations, which will be sold on 8 July, and other significant pictures, are from the collection partly inherited and partly formed by Patrick Lindsay and arranged with characteristic taste by Lady Amabel, whom he married in 1955, in their house in Lansdowne Road. The three pictures in this catalogue represent three strata of the collection: lot 26, the Girolamo da Santacroce, was acquired by Alexander, Lord Lindsay, later 25th Earl of Crawford, whose outstanding collection of early Italian pictures reflected his interest in the history of Christian art; lot 33, the impressive Hondecoeter, is from the notable collection assembled for his London house by the financier Lewis Loyd, Lord Overstone, which his daughter bequeathed to her great-nephew by marriage, David, 27th Earl of Crawford, Patrick’s grandfather; while lot 5, the intriguing Vanitas, was purchased by Patrick Lindsay himself. Brought up with great works of art, Patrick spent some time with his father’s friend, Bernard Berenson, before becoming a director of Christie’s in 1955. As head of the picture department, he made a very significant contribution to the post-war revival of Christie’s. No one who knew him will forget his instinctive response to great works of art, the conviction with which this was expressed, or the flair with which he pursued the interests that mattered to him.
MELCHIOR D'HONDECOETER (UTRECHT 1636-1695 AMSTERDAM)

A peacock on a branch with a squirrel in a tree, monkeys, a parrot, a pigeon and fruit on a marble ledge, and a hawk, a dove and a swallow flying

Details
MELCHIOR D'HONDECOETER (UTRECHT 1636-1695 AMSTERDAM)
A peacock on a branch with a squirrel in a tree, monkeys, a parrot, a pigeon and fruit on a marble ledge, and a hawk, a dove and a swallow flying
oil on canvas, unframed
76 3⁄8 x 51 5⁄8 in. (194 x 131 cm.)
Provenance
Acquired in 1863 by Samuel Jones Loyd, 1st Baron Overstone (1796-1883), London, and by descent to his daughter,
Harriet Loyd-Lindsay (née Jones-Loyd), Lady Wantage (1837-1920), 2 Carlton Gardens, London, by whom bequeathed with the contents of the house to,
David Lindsay, 27th Earl of Crawford and 10th Earl of Balcarres (1871-1940), and by descent to his son,
David Lindsay, 28th Earl of Crawford and 11th Earl of Balcarres (1900-1975), by whom given to his son,
The Hon. Patrick Lindsay (1928-1986).
Literature
A Catalogue of Pictures forming the collection of Lord and Lady Wantage at 2 Carlton Gardens, London and Lockinge House, Berks and Overstone Park and Ardington House, London, 1902, p. 72, no. 106, illustrated; 1905, p. 83, no. 106, illustrated, where listed at Carlton Gardens, as signed and dated 'M. D. Hondecoeter, An. 1685'.
C. Villiers-Stuart, 'Painters of Fowl, Fruit and Flowers', Country Life, CXVIII, no. 3059, 1 September 1955, pp. 440-1, fig. 2, as signed and dated '1685'.
Country Life, CLXV, no. 4255, 25 January 1979, illustrated on the cover.
Exhibited
London, British Institution, 1864, no. 80.
London, Royal Academy, Winter Exhibition: Dutch Pictures 1450-1750, 22 November 1952-1 March 1953, no. 431, as signed and dated 'M. D. Hondecoeter, An. 1685' (lent by the Earl of Crawford and Balcarres).
London, Thomas Agnew & Sons, Dutch and Flemish Pictures from Scottish Collections: A Loan Exhibition in Aid of the National Trust for Scotland, 8 November-8 December 1978, no. 35 (lent anonymously).

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Lot Essay

Melchior d’Hondecoeter was the leading bird painter in the Dutch seventeenth century, a fact which earned him the moniker ‘the Raphael of bird painters’ among critics two centuries later. Hondecoeter developed his visual vocabulary in the studios of his father, Gijsbert Gillisz. de Hondecoeter, and uncle, Jan Baptist Weenix, though his works are equally informed by the Antwerp artist Frans Snyders, especially evident in the freedom with which he handled the brush.

The elongated format of this large-scale painting, unusual in Hondecoeter’s oeuvre, suggests it once formed part of a larger decorative scheme. Two further canvases of similar width, depicting game atop a comparable white marble ledge before curtains, probably belong to the same ensemble (sold Sotheby’s, Paris, 15 June 2021, lot 32). The artist’s precise, shimmering rendering of the birds’ plumage and monkeys’ hair is comparable to the other pair and suggests a relatively late date in the artist’s career. Indeed, the present painting formerly bore a signature and date of 1685, the inscription probably having been transcribed from another canvas when the group was separated.

Though they seldom survive today, Hondecoeter’s animals must derive in large part from studio drawings and oil sketches. The peacock seen here appears in at least three drawings by the artist, including examples in the British Museum (inv. no. 1861,0810.23) and the Stiftung Weimarer Klassik und Kunstsammlungen, Weimar (inv. no. 5104), and, for example, as an albino example in a painting in the National Museum, Warsaw (inv. no. M.Ob.2380 MNW). Similarly, the monkey viewed frontally at lower right features in a painting dated 1683 in the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York (inv. no. 27.250.1), as well as in the example sold, Christie’s, New York, 26 January 2011, lot 25, which remains the world auction record for the artist ($1,650,500).

Perhaps more intriguingly, this painting also serves as testament to the sharing of motifs between Hondecoeter and his cousin, Jan Weenix, long after they left the studio of Jan Baptist Weenix. The monkey at extreme lower right, for example, can likewise be found in one of six large decorative canvas from the so-called ‘Baring Series’ on account of their having decorated the house built for the Baring family in Northaw, Hertfordshire, since the eighteenth century (see A. A. Van Wagenberg-Ter Hoeven, Jan Weenix: The Paintings: Master of the Dutch Hunting Still Life, Zwolle, 2018, no. 249). The canvases are typically thought to be among Weenix’s first attempts at illusionary wall decorations on a large scale, datable to a period before the so-called ‘Granada Series’, one panel of which is dated 1697. Similarly, an identical parrot seen from behind appears in Weenix’s Portrait of three children in the Museum of Fine Arts, Budapest (fig. 1), a work securely datable to 1685. With the now-erased signature and date on Hondecoeter’s painting, Weenix’s portrait provides compelling evidence that this example also dates from that year.

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