Boar Hunt (Frans Snyders) - Nationalmuseum - 126268

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Boar Hunt (Frans Snyders) - Nationalmuseum - 126268

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Description in Flemish paintings C. 1600-C. 1800 III, Nationalmuseum, Stockholm, 2010, cat.no. 20:
Technical notes: The painting is in rather poor condition,
being heavily abraded and extensively retouched. A
layer of discoloured old varnish is present and the paint
surface is encrusted with dirt. Coarse, now discoloured,
retouching is visible throughout the animals and landscape,
in the boar, in the dog with a black-and-white mottled
coat, the dog in the right foreground, the head of the
dog in the left foreground, the head of the dog at the far
right, in the foreground landscape and vegetation; with
scattered retouches in the sky and in the foliage at the
upper right. Contours have been reinforced along the
chest and outstretched left leg and paw of the hound in the
right foreground. The painting underwent conservation
treatment in 1985.
Provenance: (Sale, Bukowskis, Stockholm, 6–7 December
1918, lot 88, as Frans Snyders); Mr. Hallén, Stockholm.
(Sale, Bukowskis, Stockholm, 5–6 December 1949,
lot 112); Miss Agda Holst, Kristianstad. (Lindkvist &
Sjöberg AB, Stockholm, by 1984). Purchased in 1984.
Exhibited: Stockholm 2010, no. 44.
Six hunting dogs chase a wild boar. The scene is set in
the foreground of a wooded landscape opening up
towards a distant valley on the left. As the huge boar
leaps in profile to the left, several hounds lunge to bite
the creature or race in hot pursuit, while others tumble
perilously underfoot in the foreground.
Depictions of hunting scenes occurred in medieval
manuscript illuminations and tapestries, often included
in representations of the labours of the months, a tradition
that was continued in the 16th century in the tapestry
designs of Barent van Orley and prints by Jan van
der Straet (Stradanus) and Phillip Galle. Early in the
17th century, as Balis has shown, the hunting theme was
given a new impetus by Peter Paul Rubens, who revitalized
the subject with a new dynamism and spontaneity,1
closely followed by his contemporary, the Antwerp animal
and still life painter Frans Snyders. Although Snyders’
game pieces and still lifes far outnumber his hunting
scenes, Robels listed fifteen boar hunts by the
artist.2While in Rubens’ hunting scenes, man is always
at the centre of the conflict, whether in a mythological,
contemporary, or exotically fanciful context, Robels has
shown that in Snyders’ work, even at the outset of his
career, man is but a marginal player and soon disappears
altogether as the artist concentrates on the combat of
animals. Very often Snyders chose to depict the
moment when the dogs at last overtake their prey – the
climax of the chase and the moment of greatest danger
for both the hunters and the hunted.
This hunting piece entered the collections in 1984 as
a work of Snyders and was considered as such until its
present reattribution to an unidentified artist in the circle
of the Antwerp still life- and animal painter Pieter
Boel.3A painting depicting a Boar Hunt in a private collection
in Barcelona, attributed by Robels to Snyders
(and Paul de Vos?),4 and the artist’s larger, more complex,
signed painting of the same subject in Boston
(Museum of Fine Arts),5 which employ the same unifying
device of a boar lunging from right to left across the
scene with dogs in hot pursuit or tumbling underfoot,
both anticipate the action of the Vadstena picture.
Robels suggested that the Barcelona painting, which
she dates to the 1620s, preceded the Boston picture, the
“most important work from [Snyders’] middle period,
about 1625–1630”, which elaborates the design into a
larger and considerably wider composition. The formal
relationship between the Barcelona and Vadstena compositions
seems particularly close. Snyders’ hunting
scenes inspired many contemporary artists, being
repeated in numerous copies and variants produced by
the artist’s own Antwerp workshop as well as by artists
in his circle. The Barcelona boar hunting scene is no
exception: its composition was widely known and frequently
copied throughout the 17th century. Robels lists
six painted copies and variant versions, the latter differing
only in details like the individual hounds and landscape
setting. She also mentions an engraving, inscribed
“Sneidre invenit/F. Desportes pinxit”, executed by
François Joullain after a painted copy of Snyders’ original
by French artist François Desportes, official painter
of hunting scenes and animals to King Louis XIV, who
worked in the tradition of Flemish animal painting.6
Peter Boel employed a design similar to that of the
Barcelona and Boston pictures in works such as his
Boar Hunt in Brussels (Musées royaux des Beaux-Arts)
7 As Robels points out, Boel also produced an
etching (Holl.III, 7) that is a close variant, in reverse,
of the Barcelona original and an engraving by Lucas
Vorsterman I after Boel’s composition indicates that a
design closely related to that of the Barcelona picture
was associated with Boel in the 17th century.8
While the overall design of the present painting and
some of the animals, such as the boar, the hound on the
far left and the one with a mottled black-and-white
coat, seem derived from Snyders’ composition, other
dogs, especially those in the foreground and at the far
right, are more closely related to those in hunting
scenes by Boel and his best pupil, David de Coninck.
The two dogs lying prostrate in the foreground occur
in identical fashion in a signed Boar Hunt by De Coninck
in Prague (Národní Galerie).9 The treatment of
the landscape in the Vadstena picture, for example, the
riverbank at the lower left, also seems stylistically related
to Boel’s work. The painting may even have been
executed in Boel’s prolific workshop.
CF
1 Balis 1986, 50ff.
2 Robels 1989, pp. 39–41, cat.nos. 221–236. Only the late works are dated,
but Robels believed that Snyders’ earliest boar hunt was one which featured
a peasant with a pike and dated it to c. 1615 (Rome, Galleria
Nazionale d’Arte Antica, Galleria Corsini, inv. no. 482); for which see her
cat. no. 221.
3 Fred G. Meijer of the RKD, The Hague, kindly put at the author’s disposal
a vast amount of comparative visual material on the artists Pieter
Boel and David de Coninck collected over a period of many years, the
study of which allowed for the present reattribution of Vadstena 1.
4 Oil on canvas, 201 x 340, Barcelona, priv. coll., for which see Robels 1989,
cat. no. 225, as possibly executed with the collaboration of Paul de Vos.
5 Oil on canvas, 221 x 501, signed “F. Snÿers fecit”, Boston, Museum of
Fine Arts, inv. no. 17.322, for which see ibid, cat. no. 226.
6 For a list of these copies and variants see ibid, cat.nos. 225a–225f.
7 Oil on canvas, 178 x 236 cm, Brussels, Musées royaux des Beaux-Arts, inv.
no. 3901. Formerly attributed to Jan Fyt, the latter picture has been convincingly
reattributed to Boel by Fred G. Meijer of the RKD. Cf. a signed
painting by the artist of a boar hunt (oil on canvas, 184 x 255 cm) in the
Staatliches Museum Schloss Mosigkau.
8 Hollstein, III, 58, no. 7. Cf. a painting attributed to Boel (oil on canvas,
165 x 239), in the Collection of Lord Hesketh, Easton Neston, Towcester,
which is identical to the composition reproduced in the etching,
except for the landscape.
9 Oil on canvas, 166 x 239 cm, signed “D. Koninck”, Národní Galerie, inv.
no. DO 5016. In the same collection is also a Lion Hunt by the artist, oil
on canvas, 166 x 240 cm, inv. no. DO 4350. For the dog with a shaggy
coat in the left foreground, cf. also a lost painting of a Stag Hunt signed by
Coninck (formerly in Amsterdam, Rijksmuseum, inv. no. A 72, destroyed
in 1943); and for the dog partially visible at the far right cf. a chalk drawing
of a dog’s head currently attributed to De Coninck by Meijer, in Edinburgh

(National Gallery of Scotland, inv. no. RSA 411, as C. Saftleven). [End] Svenska: Se även beskrivning i den engelska versionen

Frans Snyders or Frans Snijders (1579–1657) was a Flemish painter of animals, hunting scenes, market scenes, and still life's. He was one of the earliest specialist animaliers and he is credited with initiating a wide variety of new still-life and animal subjects in Antwerp. He was a regular collaborator with leading Antwerp painters such as Peter Paul Rubens, Anthony van Dyck, and Jacob Jordaens.

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Date

1500 - 1600
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Source

National Gallery of Art, Washington DC
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public domain

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