View full screen - View 1 of Lot 61. Lion and tiger in a landscape.

Property of a Private Collector, Sold Without Reserve

Attributed to Johann Georg de Hamilton

Lion and tiger in a landscape

No reserve

Lot Closed

October 6, 03:00 PM GMT

Estimate

15,000 - 20,000 USD

Lot Details

Description

Property of a Private Collector, Sold Without Reserve

Attributed to Johann Georg de Hamilton

Munich 1672 - 1737 Vienna

Lion and tiger in a landscape


oil on canvas

canvas: 48 ½ by 66 ½ in.; 123.2 by 168.9 cm.

framed: 62 ¾ by 81 ½ in.; 159.4 by 207 cm. 

By tradition in the collection of the Princely Family of Liechtenstein;

By whom given to Baron Salomon Mayer von Rothschild, 1822, and hung in Schilldersdorf, Moravia, before 1843;

Thence by descent to Baron Alphonse Mayer von Rothschild, Vienna (inv. no. AR918) (listed in the Rothschild 1938 inventory in Vienna as after Rubens);

Confiscated from the above in 1938 by the Nazi authorities and restituted to the Rothschild family, 1947;

With N. Coburg;

Baron Jungenfeld;

Anonymous sale, London, Sotheby’s, 6 December 1989, lot 7 (as Hamilton);

Where acquired by Carlton Hobbs;

William Rondina, New York;

By whom sold, New York, Sotheby's, 26 May 2016, lot 43;

Where acquired by the present collector.

F. Kunth, Die Rothschild'schen: Gemäldesammlungen in Wien, Vienna 2006, pp. 212-213 (as after Rubens).

When offered in 1989, this lot was said to have been signed and dated: J. B. A. George de Hamilton Pinx 1753. This signature suggests an attribution to John Hamilton, an artist active in Vienna in the mid-18th century. The son of Ferdinand Philipp von Hamilton (1664-1750), John Hamilton was from a family of court painters who specialized in still-life and animal scenes and worked in many prominent European courts, including that of Charles V and the House of Liechtenstein. The design relates to a pair of paintings, possibly pendants, executed by Peter Paul Rubens in circa 1615. The lion and the tiger here are based on details from Neptune and Amphitrite, a painting that once formed part of the Schönborn collection in Vienna that was sold in 1881 to the Kaiser Friedrich Museum, Berlin and later destroyed during World War II.