Man with a fur hat
Is leeg, of bestaat niet
CORNELIS SAFTLEVEN
Gorinchem 1607-1681 Rotterdam
Provenance
C. Richartz Amsterdam as Frans Hals
Rosenthal 1946 as Frans Hals
Louwman as Pieter de Putter ?
Private collection The Netherlands since at least 70 years
This intriguing painting of a man with a fur cap was once signed “Frans Hals”.
This signature disappeared after a cleaning. An attribution to Pieter de Putter was proposed since this subject was in most of his genre-paintings. In fact this is a painting by Cornelis Saftleven.
Cornelis Saftleven was a Dutch painter who worked in a great variety of genres. Known in particular for his rural genre scenes, his range of subjects was very wide and included portraits, farmhouse interiors, rural and beach scenes, landscapes with cattle, history paintings, scenes of Hell, allegories, satires and illustrations of proverbs. Cornelis Saftleven was born into a family of artists. He learned to paint possibly from his father Herman, along with his brothers Abraham and Herman Saftleven the Younger. He lived for a time in Utrecht with his brother. After training in Rotterdam, Cornelis likely traveled to Antwerp around 1632. Peter Paul Rubens is known to have added figures in paintings of Saftleven before 1637. When Rubens died in 1640 there were eight Saftlevens in his collection, four of which with figures added by Rubens. Among his earliest works are portraits and peasant interiors influenced by Adriaen Brouwer. By 1634 Cornelis was in Utrecht, where his brother Herman Saftleven the Younger was living. The brothers began painting stable interiors, a new subject in peasant genre painting. He also made a double-portrait of himself and his brother in the Two Musicians (c. 1633; Academy of Fine Arts Vienna). By 1637 Cornelis had returned to Rotterdam. In 1648 he married Catharina van der Heyden, who died in 1654. The year after her death, he married Elisabeth van der Avondt. He became dean of the guild of Saint Luke of Rotterdam in 1667.
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Indistinctly signed and dated 1639
Dimensions: 22,5 x 18,6 cm
Provenance: Private collection The Netherlands
Techniques: Oil on paper
