Cornelia Claesdr Voogt

Portrait of Cornelia Claesdr. Vooght, 1631, Oil on panel, 126.5 x 101 cm
Artist Frans Hals
Year 1631 (1631)
Catalogue Hofstede de Groot, Catalog 1910: #211
Medium Oil on panel
Dimensions 126.5 cm × 101 cm (49.8 in × 40 in)
Location Frans Hals Museum, Haarlem

Portrait of Cornelia Claesdr. Vooght is a painting by the Dutch Golden Age painter Frans Hals, painted in 1631 and now in the Frans Hals Museum. It is considered a pendant portrait to that of her husband, the Haarlem brewer and mayor Nicolaes Woutersz van der Meer.

Painting

This painting was documented by Hofstede de Groot in 1910, who wrote: "201. CORNELIA CLAESDR. VOOGT (born 1578), wife of Nicolaes van der Meer. M. 54. Three-quarter-length. She sits in a large arm-chair, seen almost in full face, but slightly inclined to the left. She looks at the spectator. Her left hand rests on the arm of the chair, her right hand on her lap. She wears a cap, a black dress with a fur cape, a ruff, and lace wristbands. In the left-hand top corner hangs her coat-of-arms. [Pendant to 200.] Inscribed below the coat-of-arms, " AETAT SVAE 53 (and under this) ANo 1631 " ; panel, 51 inches by 40 inches. In the collection of Fabricius van Leyenburg. In the Haarlem Municipal Museum, bequeathed by Fabricius van Leyenburg in 1883 ; 1907 catalogue, No. 125."[1]

In 1974 Seymour Slive listed this painting as Hals' first example of a portrait at three quarter length of a woman sitting in a chair. At that time both this painting and its pendant were considered completely original, so Slive then assumed that the Hals portrait of Cornelia's sister Maritge was influenced by this one because the sitters were sisters.[2] Today both this painting and its pendant are considered original Hals portraits, but x-ray photographs show different faces under the faces we see today, leading to the possibility that these portraits once belonged to other sitters.[3]

Pendants

Husband and wife

Sisters

References

  1. Hofstede de Groot on Cornelia Claesdr. Vooght; catalog number 201
  2. Frans Hals, by Seymour Slive, 1974 a catalog raisonné of Hals works by Seymour Slive: Volume Three, the catalogue, National gallery of Art: Kress Foundation, Studies in the History of European Art, London - Phaidon Press, 1974 on Nicolaes Woutersz van der Meer; catalog number 77-78, page 46-47
  3. Frans Hals Museum
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