Interior with a Mother Close to a Cradle explained

Interior with a Mother Close to a Cradle
Artist:Pieter de Hooch
Year:c. 1665–1670
Material:oil on canvas
Height Metric:54
Width Metric:65
City:Stockholm
Museum:Nationalmuseum, Stockholm

Interior with a Mother Close to a Cradle is an oil-on-canvas painting by the Dutch painter Pieter de Hooch, created c. 1665–1670. It is part of the collection of the Nationalmuseum, Stockholm.

This painting was documented by Hofstede de Groot in 1910, who wrote:

13. MOTHER BESIDE A CRADLE. deG. 83.[1] This represents a dark room, partly illumined by sunlight, which streams through the window, and is reflected in the tiles of the floor. A young mother sits with her little girl on her lap, and points with her left hand to the cradle standing beside her. The woman wears a red skirt, the girl a yellow skirt. To the right is the fireplace; beside it is a four-post bed, at which a servant-maid is busy. The open door gives a clear view of a street beside a canal. It is almost the same composition as the picture formerly in the Van der Hoop collection (2). It is dark, unattractive, and late.

Signed indistinctly "P.D. HOO"; canvas, 21 inches by 26 inches. Mentioned in an inventory of 1816. Now in the National Museum at Stockholm, No. 473 in the 1900 catalogue.

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. This is shorthand for the catalog entry of Hofstede de Groot's first list of Hooch paintings published in Oud Holland
  2. https://archive.org/stream/catalogueraisonn01hofsuoft#page/480/mode/1up entry 13 for Mother beside a Cradle