Skip to main content
1 of 10

"Rotterdam" and "Dortmund" Pair by Jan Van Couver

You May Also Like
  • J. Van Couver, Watercolor, Dutch Harbor Scene
    By Jan Van Couver (Hermanus Koekkoek Jr.)
    Located in Ottawa, Ontario
    Jan Van Couver, (Hermanus Koekkoek, Jr.)--(1836-1909), watercolor, Dutch harbor scene, A very nice painting of the town, windmill, trees and boats with a ...
    Category

    Antique Late 19th Century Dutch Dutch Colonial Paintings

    Materials

    Watercolor

  • Barbizon Landscape Painting by Jan van Lokhorst "A Rural Cottage" (1867)
    By Jan van Lokhorst
    Located in Shippensburg, PA
    "A RURAL COTTAGE" (1867) LANDSCAPE PAINTING BY JAN VAN LOKHORST (DUTCH, 1837-1929) Signed lower right "Jan v. Lokhorst 1867", executed in oil on panel in period frame with old Boston...
    Category

    Antique 19th Century Dutch Barbizon School Paintings

    Materials

    Paint

  • Jan van de Vaart Portrait of a Lady
    Located in Lincoln, GB
    Jan van de Vaart was a Dutch painter and draughtsman of portraits, landscapes, still life's, and trompe-lioeil paintings, and a mezzotint artist who was active in England for most of...
    Category

    Antique 17th Century English Paintings

    Materials

    Paint

    Jan van de Vaart Portrait of a Lady
    $25,340 Sale Price
    25% Off
  • Antique Oil Painting Portrait of Dog by Animalier Jan Van Essen
    Located in Casteren, Noord-Brabant
    Beautiful dog portrait by the Dutch painter Jan Essen. The painting shows a Schipperke, which is a breed of dog that used to be more common than it is now. It is a small-sized shepherd, of Belgian origin. The painter has succeeded in portraying the dog in its natural position. Beautiful details are the black fur of the dog and the eyes. The way the dog looks is just very dog like, a dog lover will recognize this faithful, loyal look. Jan Essen is a well-known Dutch animal painter from the second half of the 19th century. Initially he painted landscapes and cityscapes, but under the influence of the English animal painter J. Swan he also started painting animals from 1885 onwards. He has never lacked appreciation, because his work has been awarded at exhibitions in Amsterdam, Germany, France and Australia. He learned the trade from Conrad Greive (1837-1891). Signed and dated top left, Jan van Essen...
    Category

    Early 20th Century Dutch Belle Époque Paintings

    Materials

    Canvas, Pine, Paint

  • 19th Century Red Chalk Drawing of Sheep by Jan van Ravenswaay
    Located in London, GB
    A very fine and charming red chalk drawing of studies of sheep by Jan van Ravenswaay (1789-1869). Signed and date 1823 lower right. Red chalk. Mounted and framed. Jan van R...
    Category

    Antique Early 19th Century Dutch Drawings

    Materials

    Paper

  • Jan van der Vaart Portrait of Dorothy, Lady Brownlow
    By Jan van der Vaart
    Located in London, GB
    Jan van der Vaart (1647-1727) Portrait of Dorothy, Lady Brownlow (1664-1700) Oil on canvas; held in a period carved wood frame circa 1687 Considered a beauty of the age, Dorothy, Lady Brownlow was painted on a number of occasions by some of the most talented and respected artists of the day; Kneller, Riley, Closterman, Dahl and Wissing, all rendered her features in oil for posterity. The portrait presented here is by Jan van der Vaart who from 1685-1687 was employed by Willem Wissing as a drapery and landscape painter. After Wissing’s death in 1687 he practiced as an independent portraitist much in the style of his master with some influence also of Kneller. This work is in fact the head and shoulders taken from Wissing’s three-quarter length of Lady Brownlow which hangs at Belton House, Lincolnshire and produced as a mezzotint in 1687. Van der Vaart has made some intriguing alterations particularly as the sitter now looks directly at us, appearing rather more provocative and self assured of her beauty. The confident rendering of the dress and pearls and the thickly drawn copious hair are hallmarks of Van der Vaart’s work. It is likely he completed this portrait – shortly after Wissing’s version – as a smaller variant intended for another family member as was often the practice. Dorothy Mason married Sir William Brownlow 4th Bt. in July 1688; she was the daughter and heir of Sir Richard Mason a politician and courtier to Charles II who owned estates at Bishop’s Castle, Salop and Sutton Surrey. She came from, and married into extreme wealth; her dowry upon marriage was £10,000 and on her death her husband inherited the estates that were once her father’s. In June 1697 William Brownlow succeeded his brother to the baronetcy and to most of his landed estates including Belton House. In 1698 he abandoned his Peterborough seat to contest Bishop’s Castle on behalf of his wife and in the interest of his mother-in-law, Lady Anna Mason...
    Category

    Antique Late 17th Century English Paintings

    Materials

    Canvas, Giltwood

Recently Viewed

View All