102260269

Vendu
Brussels School (XIX) - Interior with a seamstress - NO RESERVE
Offre finale
€ 200
Il y a 1 jour

Brussels School (XIX) - Interior with a seamstress - NO RESERVE

Brussels School – Late 19th century Interior with a seamstress Oil on panel Scene of a woman knitting in a quiet domestic interior. Paintings of this type belong to the tradition of Belgian genre painting, a school that had an important development in the second half of the nineteenth century. After the independence of Belgium in 1830, Brussels became a major artistic centre. Many painters trained at the Royal Academy of Fine Arts of Brussels, where genre scenes of everyday life were widely practiced. Subjects showing women sewing, knitting or reading were common and reflected daily life in bourgeois interiors. These themes were closely linked to the tradition of Dutch interior painting associated with artists such as Johannes Vermeer and Pieter de Hooch, whose work influenced many nineteenth-century painters in Belgium and the Netherlands. The painting bears a visible signature in the lower area of the composition. Although the signature has not yet been identified, its presence indicates that the work was produced by a professional painter. During the nineteenth century many academically trained or commercially active artists signed their works even when their names were not later documented in major artist dictionaries, which explains why numerous signed paintings from this period remain unattributed today. A historical detail appears on the reverse: the stamp of the Brussels artists’ supplier Comptoir des Arts Adèle De Swarte, Rue de la Violette. Suppliers of this type provided prepared panels and materials to painters working in Brussels in the nineteenth century and their stamps are often used today to confirm the geographical context of a work. The size corresponds to what collectors of the time called a cabinet painting. During the second half of the nineteenth century the growing bourgeois class in Belgium created a strong market for small interior scenes intended for private homes. These works were produced for libraries, salons and private collections, which explains the intimate scale and the quiet domestic subject. Panel: 24 × 16.5 cm Framed: 39 × 31 cm Condition consistent with age, with minor surface wear and small paint losses.

102260269

Vendu
Brussels School (XIX) - Interior with a seamstress - NO RESERVE

Brussels School (XIX) - Interior with a seamstress - NO RESERVE

Brussels School – Late 19th century

Interior with a seamstress
Oil on panel

Scene of a woman knitting in a quiet domestic interior. Paintings of this type belong to the tradition of Belgian genre painting, a school that had an important development in the second half of the nineteenth century.

After the independence of Belgium in 1830, Brussels became a major artistic centre. Many painters trained at the Royal Academy of Fine Arts of Brussels, where genre scenes of everyday life were widely practiced. Subjects showing women sewing, knitting or reading were common and reflected daily life in bourgeois interiors.

These themes were closely linked to the tradition of Dutch interior painting associated with artists such as Johannes Vermeer and Pieter de Hooch, whose work influenced many nineteenth-century painters in Belgium and the Netherlands.

The painting bears a visible signature in the lower area of the composition. Although the signature has not yet been identified, its presence indicates that the work was produced by a professional painter. During the nineteenth century many academically trained or commercially active artists signed their works even when their names were not later documented in major artist dictionaries, which explains why numerous signed paintings from this period remain unattributed today.

A historical detail appears on the reverse: the stamp of the Brussels artists’ supplier Comptoir des Arts Adèle De Swarte, Rue de la Violette. Suppliers of this type provided prepared panels and materials to painters working in Brussels in the nineteenth century and their stamps are often used today to confirm the geographical context of a work.

The size corresponds to what collectors of the time called a cabinet painting. During the second half of the nineteenth century the growing bourgeois class in Belgium created a strong market for small interior scenes intended for private homes. These works were produced for libraries, salons and private collections, which explains the intimate scale and the quiet domestic subject.

Panel: 24 × 16.5 cm
Framed: 39 × 31 cm

Condition consistent with age, with minor surface wear and small paint losses.

Offre finale
€ 200
Caterina Maffeis
Expert
Estimation  € 500 - € 600

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