Two turtle doves on a branch 1750
Aert Schouman
PapelLápiz
36 ⨯ 25 cm
€ 6.500
Inter-Antiquariaat Mefferdt & De Jonge
- Sobre la obra de arteTwo turtle doves on a branch. Drawing in watercolour and bodycolour by Aert Schouman, executed around 1750. On the verso, annotated in Schouman’s own hand: “het bovenste een tortelduyf, dank het wijfie van onse inlandts. en de onderste een kaaps tortelduyfje bijde levendig” [“The upper one is a turtle dove, namely the female of our native (Dutch) species; and the lower one a Cape turtle dove, both rendered in a life-like manner.]. With watermark of the Strasbourg Lily. Size: 36.4 × 25.5 cm. Aert Schouman (1710–1792) was an artist of remarkably wide range, but his international reputation rests chiefly on his painted—and especially his watercoloured—bird studies, through which he secured a singular and exceptional position within art history. As far as is known, Schouman began making this type of bird portrait, such as the present doves, as early as 1734. He made them not only for collectors of drawings, but also for scholars and owners of cabinets of naturalia, who greatly valued his scrupulous and highly naturalistic treatment of proportions, contours, postures and colours. Schouman usually chose a very low viewpoint, creating a broad expanse of sky with subtly painted clouds. This gives the impression that the viewer is looking upward—an entirely natural perspective when observing birds. Over the course of the eighteenth century, interest in nature grew among an ever-widening public, including in the Netherlands. This curiosity extended to the exotic flora and fauna of overseas trading regions, from which interested professors, physicians, clergymen, merchants and government officials assembled natural specimens. As a result, numerous private cabinets of naturalia came into being. Schouman’s watercolours were acquired by such collectors not only as autonomous works of art, but also—indeed above all—as study material for their own collections. In this drawing we see a Dutch turtle dove (Streptopelia turtur), together with “a Cape turtle dove”. By this, Schouman is likely to have meant a pigeon (perhaps Treron calvus) ‘from Africa’, rather than specifically from the Dutch Cape Colony. This is a comparative study that cannot have taken place in nature. Exotic birds from Africa and Asia reached the Dutch Republic through the trading networks of the Dutch East India Company (VOC), with the Cape of Good Hope serving as an important hub. Within this context, such animals were kept, studied and depicted as objects of scientific curiosity and collecting culture, with geographically disparate species deliberately brought together in order to make differences in form, colour and origin visible. It is estimated that Schouman produced around 1,000 bird watercolours, depicting more than 240 different species. Writing about Schouman in 1842, J. Immerzeel observed: “The field in which Schouman particularly distinguished himself was that of birds. His birds are irreproachable in drawing, graceful and distinctive in posture and movement, downy, velvety, elegant or richly variegated in plumage. To this he united an ease of execution that testified to the certainty with which he handled both brush and pen. Nor was there any lack of connoisseurs who knew how to appreciate his work, and collectors gladly opened their portfolios to his finely worked bird drawings, executed with watercolour.” Price: Euro 6.500,- (incl. frame)
- Sobre el artista
Aart Schouman (también escrito Aert Schouman) (Dordrecht, 4 de marzo de 1710 - La Haya, 5 de julio de 1792) fue un versátil pintor y empapelador, aguafuertista, acuarelista y grabador holandés. Aunque su obra gozó de relativamente poco reconocimiento durante mucho tiempo, fue un artista destacado en Zelanda y el sur de los Países Bajos en el siglo XVIII, con una carrera que abarcó Dordrecht, La Haya y Middelburg.
A los quince años, Schouman fue aprendiz del pintor Adriaan van der Burg. En 1736, fundó la Hermandad de San Lucas de Dordrecht, una asociación para amantes y aficionados del arte en la región. También desempeñó un papel destacado en La Haya: presidió la hermandad de pintores Pictura durante cuatro años y fue miembro honorario de una sociedad de poesía de La Haya.
Su obra se compone de retratos y grandes empapelados pintados. Inicialmente, trabajó principalmente con temas mitológicos y bíblicos, pero posteriormente se centró en temas más decorativos y de historia natural: composiciones con aves, animales raros y estudios de plantas. Dibujó animales de la colección del estatúder Guillermo V en Het Kleine Loo y fue especialmente apreciado por sus acuarelas de paisajes urbanos y paisajes tipo parque con aves exóticas, notablemente únicas en su época y aún reconocibles como su firma. Además de pintar, se dedicó al aguafuerte y al grabado en vidrio, y también coleccionó arte. Su vida está excepcionalmente bien documentada gracias a sus diarios.
En los últimos años, su obra ha sido visiblemente revalorizada. El Museo Dordrechts organizó varias exposiciones dedicadas a Schouman, y en 2020, dos papeles pintados que pintó en París fueron adquiridos para el Palacio Huis ten Bosch, donde se exhibieron en el comedor negro. Sus obras volvieron a exhibirse en el Museo Dordrechts entre 2025 y 2026, consolidando aún más su reputación como una representación refinada de la naturaleza y la decoración.
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