| |
Collection Details
bought by Lord Faringdon from Colnaghis,
in 1957.
Literature
M G Roethlisberger and M Bok, Abraham Bloemaert
and his Sons, 1993, p. 39; M G Roethlisberger, Early Abraham Bloemaert
in Tableau, December 1994, pp. 479, repd.
Exhibition Details
Manchester City Art Gallery, Between Renaissance
and Baroque, 1965, No. 105 (exhibited with companion picture 184 (see
below) as Frans Floris).
Companion Picture
see No. 184.
Background
Until recently, the work of Bloemaert has been
little known, and many of his earliest paintings recorded by his contemporaries
are missing. In the past, the Buscot roundels have been attributed to
Goltzius (Ceres) and Floris (Bacchus) but recent studies have placed them
firmly within the body of Bloemaerts work.
In his account of a visit in April 1590 to the home of Adriaan van der
Burch, provincial court clerk at Utrecht, Aernout van Buchell records
seeing three paintings (tabulas) of Bacchus, Ceres and Venus by
Blomart, but not known (nulla tamen nota). In a diary entry for
1591, van Buchell again singles out amongst the work of Bloemaert two
roundels depicting Bacchus and Ceres, although he makes no mention of
Venus. While Bacchus and Ceres are an established iconographic pair, they
are far more commonly found together with Venus, united in a single composition
or as a trilogy, and Roethlisberger (Early Abraham Bloemaert,
p. 47) argues that the two panels of Bacchus and Ceres now in the Faringdon
Collection at Buscot are indeed those referred to by van Buchell. Roethlisberger
further suggests that the now missing Venus would have been a frontal
image of the same size in the middle, the figure, presumably bare-breasted,
with or without Cupid, lit from the left like Bacchus and Ceres, who are
turning with thoughtful glances toward this centre. He considers
the two tondi to be amongst Bloemaerts earliest, and finest, works,
probably painted in Utrecht in the late 1580s. Both panels have been cleaned
since their acquisition by the Faringdon Collection.
<< Back
to Page 9
Copyright © The Trustees of the Faringdon
Collection 1999.
All rights reserved.
|