Master Works on Paper from Five Centuries

Master Works on Paper from Five Centuries

View full screen - View 1 of Lot 34. The King Drinks.

Property from a European Private Collection

Egbert van Heemskerck the Elder

The King Drinks

Auction Closed

July 6, 10:38 AM GMT

Estimate

12,000 - 18,000 GBP

Lot Details

Description

Property from a European Private Collection

Egbert van Heemskerck the Elder

Haarlem 1634/35 - 1704 London

The King Drinks


Oil, en grisaille, on blue paper;

a faint black chalk figure study, verso

254 by 306 mm

Baron Horace de Landau, 
his niece Florence, Mrs. Hugo Finaly (L.1334c), with associated number 147;
probably her sale, Zurich, 13-16 October 1948;
with Szümowski, Zurich;
Tor Engerström;
thence by descent until sold, London, Christie's, 4 July 2000, lot 219;
with Flavia Ormond Fine Art (Master Drawings, catalogue 12, 2005, no. 6)

Egbert van Heemskerck, a pupil of Pieter de Grebber in Haarlem, lived and worked in England for much of his later career, painting genre scenes and also making something of a speciality of depictions of Quaker meetings. 


This oil on paper, painted en grisaille, depicts, however, a rather rowdier scene, though still with some religious connotations. The subject is a traditional Twelfth Night or Epiphany celebration, when according to Dutch and Flemish custom, someone would be chosen as king for the night, in honour of the visit of the Three Kings to Bethlehem. These festivities generally involved much drinking, and so the subject is also frequently known as ‘The King Drinks.’ Jacob Jordaens made a number of paintings and drawings with this theme, which also became popular in the Northern Netherlands.


Though the technique of making monochrome oil sketches on paper was perhaps more prevalent in Heemskerck’s time in Flanders than in the Northern Netherlands, it had always enjoyed a certain local popularity in his native Haarlem, in the hands of earlier artists like Goltzius and Cornelis van Haarlem and also his own contemporaries such as Cornelis Bega. Robust and somewhat bawdy, yet also technically refined, this accomplished and appealing work fits very well into Haarlem’s distinguished artistic tradition.