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The second sale of works from the Collection of Jacques Goudstikker will take place in London on 5th July. Chief among these is the extraordinary altarpiece by Jacob Cornelisz. van Oostsanen and workshop (fig. 1 ![]() Only 27 known pictures can be attributed to van Oostsanen, a painter from the Northern Netherlands, active from circa 1507-1533. He was an influential figure in Amsterdam, where he ran a successful workshop. Van Oostsanen began his career as a print maker, specialising in woodcuts and his early style is steeped in the late gothic tradition of the Haarlem School. The present altarpiece, whose central panel depicts The Last Supper flanked by the double wings depicting Saints and donors, was painted in circa 1525 for the Carthusian Cloister of Nieuwlicht in Utrecht. It marks a refinement of his style, reflecting the influence of artists such as Jan Gossart and Jan van Scorel, both of whom joined van Oostsanen's studio in 1512. Here, the essentially gothic composition is combined with more elongated figures, simplified landscapes and a looser, more fluid application of paint, to produce one of his mature masterpieces. Other early 16th-century pictures from the collection include two panels by the German artist Hans Süss von Kulmbach (fig. 2 ![]() The beautiful still-life by the rare Frankfurt-based artist Jeremias van Winghe (fig. 3 ![]() There are a number of important Dutch landscapes from the Golden Age in the sale. Outstanding examples include A wooded landscape with a mountain stream and waterfall by Jacob Isaacksz. van Ruisdael (fig. 4 ![]() ![]() The Dutch townscape is represented by one of the genre's greatest exponents, Gerrit Adriaensz. Berckheyde. The Plaats with the Buitenhof and the Gevangenpoort, The Hague (fig. 6 ![]() |