Object data
oil on canvas
support: height 66 cm × width 49.5 cm
outer size: depth 8 cm (support incl. frame)
Abraham Brueghel
1670
oil on canvas
support: height 66 cm × width 49.5 cm
outer size: depth 8 cm (support incl. frame)
…; anonymous sale, [Ledeboer and Roest van Limburg], Amsterdam (Van Pappelendam & Schouten), 13 December 1887, no. 11, fl. 121, to C.F. Roos, for the museum;1 on loan to the Dutch embassy, Moscow, 1947; on loan through the DRVK, 1953-61; on loan to the Kantongerecht, Haarlem, 1961-85; transferred to the RBK, The Hague, 1985-92; on loan to the Dutch ambassador’s residence, Bonn, 1992-99; on loan to the embassy in Berlin, 1999-2014; transferred to the RCE, Rijswijk, 2014-15; returned to the museum, 2015
Object number: SK-A-1433
Copyright: Public domain
Abraham Brueghel (Antwerp 1631 - Naples 1697)
Abraham Brueghel, a still life painter active chiefly in Rome and Naples, was born in Antwerp, the second son of Jan Brueghel II (see biography under SK-A-3027) and Anna Maria Janssens, and baptized on 28 November 1631.2 He was presumably trained by his father, but no record of his activity in his native city has been found.3 He is next documented as living in Rome in 1659,4 but he may by then have been in Italy for over ten years, most likely in Sicily,5 perhaps taking advantage of contacts his father had made as a young man.6 Brueghel is subsequently recorded in Rome until 1675,7 marrying by 1668,8 and becoming a member of the Accademia di San Luca in 16709 and of the Congregazione dei Virtuosi del Pantheon in 1671.10 He was nicknamed ‘Rhijngraf’ by the Bentveughels, the society of mostly Dutch and Flemish artists active in Rome.11 During his Roman sojourn, Brueghel may have visited Messina on perhaps two occasions, on one of which he also visited Naples,12 where he had settled by June 1675 when a son was born to him there.13 His most notable commission in Naples came from Luca Giordano (1634-1705), the leading artist in the city, to participate in the decorations for Corpus Domini in 1684.14 While Laureati15 points to Brueghel’s prominence as a still-life painter in Rome – and his correspondence with the important Messinese maecenas Don Antonio Ruffo (1610-1678) well illustrates his activity there16 – she indicates a decline in his artistic activity during his years in Naples. However, several Neapolitan collectors of his work are recorded17 and the biographer of Neapolitan painters, Bernardo de Dominici (1683-c. 1754), admired him.18
The 1684 decorations were made in collaboration with Paolo de Matteis (1662-1728) and the still-life painter Giovanni Battista Ruoppolo (1629-1693); earlier in Rome, Brueghel had often collaborated with figure painters, for instance, Giacinto Brandi (1621-1691), Guglielmo Cortese (1628-1679), Giovanni Battista Gaulli (1639-1704) and Carlo Maratta (1625-1713).19 A still life with figures by Maratta was already in the prestigious Anthoine collection in Antwerp by 1691,20 six years before the artist’s death in Naples on 21 November 1697.21
REFERENCES
B. de Dominici, Vite de’ Pittori, Scultori ed Architetti Napoletani, [1840-46], 2 vols., eds. F. Sricchia Santoro and A. Zezza, Naples 2008; V. Ruffo, ‘Galleria Ruffo nel secolo XVII in Messina’, Bolletino d’Arte 10 (1916); U. Prota-Giurleo, Pittori Napoletani del Seicento, Naples [1953]; Laureati in F. Porzio (ed.), La natura morta in Italia, 2 vols., Milan 1989; G. Bocchi and U. Bocchi, Pittori di natura morta a Roma: Artisti stranieri, 1630-1750, Viadana [2004]
Abraham Brueghel is recorded in Rome for the first time in 1659, and his activity as a still-life painter is documented at least by 1663/64.22 Yet his first extant signed and dated painting, of a woman taking fruit from a ledge, in the Musée du Louvre, Paris, is of 1669.23
The present painting of the following year is the artist’s second extant work to bear a date. In contrast to the Louvre painting, which has an extravagant display of fruit, it is restrained and modest in ambition; and while there is no reason to doubt the authenticity of the signature, it is perhaps rather hesitantly written and seems ambitious for the scope of the work. However, the painting is comparable to that signed and dated in the following year in the Galleria Sabauda, Turin, published by Hoogewerff.24
Gregory Martin, 2022
U. Thieme and F. Becker (eds.), Allgemeines Lexikon der bildenden Künstler von der Antike bis zur Gegenwart, 33 vols., Leipzig 1907-50, V, p. 97; G.J. Hoogewerff, ‘Abramo Brueghel e Niccolino van Houbraken: Pittori di fiori in italia’, Dedalo 11 (1931), pp. 482-94, esp. pp. 482-83; D. Bodart, Les Peintres des Pays-Bas Méridionaux et de la Principauté de Liège à Rome au XVIIème siècle, 2 vols., Brussels/Rome 1970, I, pp. 492-93, II, fig. 294; E. Greindl, Les peintres flamands de nature morte au XVIIe siècle, Sterrebeek 1983 [ed. princ. 1956], p. 341, no. 1; L. Salerno, La natura morta italiana, 1560-1805: Still Life Painting in Italy, 1560-1805, Rome 1984, p. 190; [L. Laureati] in F. Porzio (ed.), La natura morta in Italia, 2 vols., Milan 1989, p. 788, fig. 934; Seelig in Saur Allgemeines Künstlerlexikon: Die Bildenden Künstler aller Zeiten und Völker, Munich/Leipzig 1983-, XIV, p. 482
1903, p. 66, no. 643; 1904, p. 81, no. 643; 1911, p. 92, no. 643; 1976, p. 153, no. A 1433
G. Martin, 2022, 'Abraham Brueghel, Bunches of Grapes, Pomegranates and Figs in a Landscape, 1670', in Flemish Paintings in the Rijksmuseum, online coll. cat. Amsterdam: hdl.handle.net/10934/RM0001.COLLECT.7380
(accessed 23 November 2024 16:23:39).