A Youth with a Jug explained

A Youth with a Jug
Artist:Judith Leyster
Year:1633
Medium:Oil on canvas
Height Metric:89
Width Metric:85
Metric Unit:cm
Imperial Unit:in

A Youth with a Jug is a 1633 oil painting by Judith Leyster currently in a private collection.[1]

Provenance

This painting was first documented as being in the collection of Arthur Kay who published his "Treasure Trove of Art" in 1939, including this Youth with a Jug as one of a series on the five senses painted by Judith Leyster.[2] Later the five paintings were documented as being in the collection of Paris gallery owner Georges Wildenstein, Buenos Aires by 1941.[1] By the 1950s the paintings were split up on the art market and this one was attributed to Leyster by the researcher Frima Fox Hofrichter in 1991 when it was sold to the present owner. In 2002 three of the paintings were brought back together and attributed to Leyster's husband Jan Miense Molenaer. Since then the remaining two have come on the market, but new examination has brought doubts as to whether all five paintings were ever a set. This one remains attributed to Leyster.

Kannekijker

The painting depicts a kannekijker, one who peers wistfully into the bottom of an empty jug as if by wishing more wine will appear in it.[1] The painting is unsigned, but the chemise of the boy is similar to that of another painting attributed to Leyster in the Bristol Art Gallery.[1]

The painter Frans Hals also made a youthful kannekijker in his Two laughing boys with mug of beer:

See also

Notes and References

  1. http://www.sothebys.com/en/auctions/ecatalogue/2004/important-old-master-paintings-n07965/lot.110.html Information from Sotheby's sale of lot 110 in 2004, NYC
  2. D.P. Weller, Jan Miense Molenaer. Painter of the Dutch Golden Age, exhibition catalogue, North Carolina Museum of Art, Raleigh 2002