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Inscribed
E . .66. (as if carved in stone at foot of column).
Collection Details
Miss Molyneux sale, Robinson and Fisher, 3 June
1937, lot 95, as Flinck: bt by Agnew, from whom acquired by Lord Faringdon,
1942.
Literature
Apollo, XXIX, June 1939, repd; R A dHulst,
De Tekeningen van Jakob Jordaens, 1956, No. 73.
Exhibition Details
Agnew, London, 1939, No. 41.
Related Painting
An almost identical portrait is in the Musées
Royaux, Brussels (No. 244), in which the sitter is seen wearing a white
cap. An inscription, also at the foot of the column, explains the digits
in the present picture. This reads
tis 66 . . 641 (ie,
Aetatis 66 1641). It is slightly smaller than the painting catalogued
here, but the canvas is likely to have been reduced. The Buscot portrait
may be judged superior.
Related Drawings
A black chalk study for the figure, with differences
in the background, is in the Louvre (No. 20,021). It was published by
Rooses, Onze Kunst, 1903 (II), pp. 159, repd, 160, as a study for the
Brussels portrait. As the sitter is wearing a black cap, it can perhaps
be more plausibly associated with the picture now at Buscot.
Companion Picture
The Portrait of an Old Man aged 73, with the sitters
age painted as if incised in the bronze base of the column, once in the
Crozat collection and now in the Hermitage (cf exh cat Dutch and Flemish
Paintings from the Hermitage, New York and Chicago, 1988, No. 43), is
the pendant of the present picture. A study for it in the Louvre (No.
20,022) is a companion drawing to the study of the woman referred to above.
The Portrait of a Man aged 73 with the date 1641 painted over the original
date, 1637, which first appeared in the Baron de Beurnonville sale, Paris,
9 May 1881, and was in the Thyssen collection (size 571/2 in. x 44 in.)
until sold at auction in 1984 (and again in 1988), is a pair to the portrait
at Brussels (cf M Rooses, Jordaens, 1906, p. 110). What appears to be
the superior quality of the Buscot painting, as well as its closer relationship
to the drawing, leads to the supposition that it, rather than the Brussels
version, is the pendant to the true original of the Portrait of an Old
Man, in the Hermitage.
Background
Rooses (op cit, p. 111), writing of the Brussels and Thyssen portraits,
describes them as being executed in the extreme of Jordaens manière
moëlleuse et fondue, which he began in c.1637. The Buscot version
is painted in a similar style. Prof Michael Jaffé has pointed out
that Jordaens is here reviving a type of composition that originated in
Flanders. The invention of this uncompromisingly frontal pattern is due
to Frans Floris; the prototype is the Falconers Wife at Caen.
The pentiment of a curtain can be discerned in the archway at the top
right. The picture appears to have been cut down on all sides, despite
the fact that the drawing shows a smaller area of background.
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