Going for a Walk in the Amsterdam Town Hall explained

Going for a Walk in the Amsterdam Town Hall
Artist:Pieter de Hooch
Year:–1665
Medium:Oil painting on canvas
Movement:Dutch Golden Age painting
Genre painting
Height Metric:72
Width Metric:85
Dimensions Ref:[1]
City:Strasbourg
Museum:Musée des Beaux-Arts
Accession:1890

Going for a Walk in the Amsterdam Town Hall (–1665) is an oil-on-canvas painting by the Dutch painter Pieter de Hooch. It is an example of Dutch Golden Age painting and is now in the Musée des Beaux-Arts de Strasbourg, inventory number 213.[2] This piece overwhemingly likely originated in De Hooch's Amsterdam period considering the setting.ly originated during De Hooch's Amsterdam period considering the local setting.

Description

In the Amsterdam Town Hall, now the Royal Palace of Amsterdam, an upper class couple walk through the building, built a mere decade earlier. The man wears a tall, cavalier-style, broad-brimmed hat accented with red and white feathers. In the fashion of the time, he also wears a white shirt with ruffled sleeves and collar, wearing a red cloak over one shoulder. The woman also wears a veil, partly concealing her gold-embroidered blue bodice, and with her right hand lifts up her yellow skirt.

To the right of them, a hunting-type dog appears to follow the couple. Behind them, through the columns, a nurse walks with a baby in their arms. This scene likely takes place in the south gallery, with the floor tiled in circles in the foreground and squares in the background. Columns stand on the left and pilasters on the right, acting as principal lines to lead the viewer into an open door at the back of the composition.through this door in this room, a high window and a table and chair lay, with the curtain, the table-cloth, and the chair-cushion painted in bright vermillion to accent the man's cloak and to contrast the rest of the image, drawing the viewer's eyes to the room, with the change in tone similarly represented by the change in tiles to a black-and-white checkerboard pattern.[3]

Repainting

Originally, the painting included the figure of another man near to the entrance of the back room which has since been painted out. An 1827 sale mentions a man with a black cloak, likely the aforementioned painted-out figure. Additionally, analysis suggests the dog in the foreground was later repainted in a different fashion. Despite this, it is undoubted by collectors as a genuine De Hooch, ruling out the possibility of this painting's creation belonging to Abraham Janssens as may have been first believed.

Associated artworks

The hallway's of the Amsterdam Town Hall, including the featured South hallway feature marble statues. The relief at the back is a depiction of Mercury by the hand of Artus Quellinus the Elder, and the circular tiles where the couple stand is 'Peace', an atlas-style depiction of Earth.[4]

De Hooch has also made at least two more paintings with scenes of the interior of the City Hall, one featuring a classic Dutch Golden Age motif in the form of a curtain covering a portion of the image.

History of ownership

The painting was first sold by H. Reydon in Amsterdam in April 1827. It is noted as in the collection of Howard Galton, Hadzor House, Droitwich, circa. 1850-1857. The last sale was from the possession of E. Warneck to Dr. Wilhelm von Bode for the Strasbourg Museum of Fine Arts where it resides today.[5]

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: Le Bideau-Vincent . Sandrine . Collection du musée des Beaux-Arts – Peinture flamande et hollandaise XVème-XVIIIème siècle . February 2009 . Musées de la ville de Strasbourg . Strasbourg . 978-2-35125-030-3 . 217–218.
  2. Book: Jacquot . Dominique . Le musée des Beaux-Arts de Strasbourg. Cinq siècles de peinture . 2006 . Musées de Strasbourg . Strasbourg . 2-901833-78-0 . 128–129.
  3. https://archive.org/stream/catalogueraisonn01hofsuoft#page/532/mode/1up entry 199 for Going for a walk
  4. Web site: Inside the Palace on Dam square – MforAmsterdam Tours . 2024-01-02 . mforamsterdam.com.
  5. Web site: Ministère de la Culture . 2023-11-22 . Identification du bien culturel . gouv.fr.