
Property from the Collection formed by Dr. Einar Perman (1893-1976), Stockholm
Houses by the water
Auction Closed
January 31, 05:59 PM GMT
Estimate
15,000 - 20,000 USD
Lot Details
Description
Pieter Stevens
Mechelen (?) circa 1567 - after 1624 Prague (?)
Houses by the water
Pen and brown ink and brown and blue wash over traces of black chalk, within brown ink framing lines;
bears numbering lettering (price or inventory code?) in brown ink, verso: o/ac
176 by 293 mm; 7 by 11 ½ in.
For a number of years either side of 1600, the Court of the Holy Roman Emperor Rudolf II at Prague was an extraordinary artistic centre, attracting leading artist from all over Europe. Some, like Jan Breughel and Roelandt Savery, visited for only a relatively short period, but others settled permanently in Prague; Peter Stevens was appointed court painter to the Emperor in 1594, and seems to have remained in Prague until his death some time after 1624. Prior to his arrival there, it seems, however, that the artist also travelled to Italy. A series of drawings in the Akademie der Bildenden Künste, Vienna, depicting ruins and aqueducts in and around Rome and Naples, were attributed to Stevens by An Zwollo in 1968, and several of those drawings are dated 1590 or 1591.1The present drawing is typical of the fantastical capricci of mountain and river landscapes dating from Stevens' Rudolfine years, which, like so many landscape works produced by artists of the Prague school, generally reflect very strongly the wild Bohemian scenery. The powerful penwork and bold blue and grey washes are also frequently seen in these works.
See also the following lot.
1. An Zwollo, 'Pieter Stevens, ein vergessener Maler des Rudolfinischen Kreises,' Jahrbuch der Kunsthistorischen Sammlungen in Wien, vol. 64, N.F. XXVIII, 1968, p.131
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