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Identification and Creation

Object Number
1932.206
People
Allart van Everdingen, Dutch (Alkmaar, Netherlands 1621 - 1675 Amsterdam, Netherlands)
Title
March: Ships at Sea
Other Titles
Former Title: Ships at Sea
Classification
Drawings
Work Type
drawing
Date
17th century
Culture
Dutch
Persistent Link
https://hvrd.art/o/298224

Physical Descriptions

Medium
Brown wash over black chalk on cream antique laid paper, framing line in brown ink
Dimensions
15.8 x 20.9 cm (6 1/4 x 8 1/4 in.)
Inscriptions and Marks
  • Signed: lower right on boat, brown ink: AVE
  • inscription: verso, lower center, graphite, unidentified Dutch collector c. 1700: no 42 Everdinge
  • inscription: verso, upper left, graphite: 3
  • inscription: verso, lower right, graphite: Amsterdam 1901. / k. fl.
  • watermark: Foolscap with a seven-pointed collar; nearly identical to Hinterding 2006, vol. 2, foolscap no. C.a.b., pp. 140– 41 (probably 1650s)
  • inscription: verso, upper left, graphite: 9 [encircled]
  • inscription: verso, lower left, graphite: 2
  • inscription: verso, lower left, graphite, over "Maart" and abraded: ox [intertwined, followed by four illegible numbers] -
  • inscription: verso, lower center, graphite: f 42 10
  • inscription: verso, lower left, graphite, abraded: Maart

Provenance

Recorded Ownership History
Unidentified Dutch collector, c. 1700 (his inscription, verso, lower center). Probably Pieter Testas de Jonge, Amsterdam, sold; [probably De Leth, Amsterdam, 29 March 1757 and following days, under lots H. 404-415], entire series of the Twelve Months sold; to Van Beest. Possibly Bernardus Hagelis, Amsterdam, possibly sold; [De Leth, Amsterdam, 8 March 1762, lot F. 484, as part of entire series.] Dionys Muilman, Amsterdam, sold; [De Bosch, Amsterdam, 29 March 1773 and following days, under lots I. 634-45], entire series; to Jacob de Vos, Amsterdam. Possibly Nicolaas Nieuhoff, Amsterdam, possibly sold; [Van der Schley, Amsterdam, 14 April 1777 and following days, under lots Q.1256-62] as individual sheets; to various buyers (Ploos, Fouquet, Oets and Yver). Probably Jan Hulswit, Amsterdam, probably sold; [De Vries, Amsterdam, 20 October 1822, lot H. 4.]; to De Vries. Probably Hendrik Harmen Klijn, Amsterdam, probably sold; [Roos, Amsterdam, 27 May 1856, lot 26]; to Engelberts. Madame… van Kinschot-Luden, Amsterdam, or “Fundatie Renswoude,” Utrecht, sold; [Muller, Amsterdam, 31 January 1899 and following days, lot 747.] Amsterdam collector or trade, sold; to Charles A. Loeser, New York and Florence, 1901 (his inscription, verso); Bequest of Charles A. Loeser, 1932.206*

*Alice Davies expertly reconstructed the provenance of this drawing, along with the larger series of the Twelve Months to which it belongs, in her monograph of Everdingen’s drawings, see Davies 2007, pp. 365-66, cat. nos. 529 and 531, and pp. 40, 104-5. The series appears to have remained largely intact – despite often having been sold as separate lots – until the sale of Nicolaas Nieuhoff in 1777, where four buyers each claimed a portion of the twelve sheets. The descriptions in this sale catalogue are not detailed enough, however, to know for certain if the series as sold consisted of the Everdingen’s original suite or one cobbled together of mismatched sheets, nor which buyer purchased our drawing. Nonetheless, thereafter, Ships at Sea was sold as an independent sheet.

Published Text

Catalogue
Drawings from the Age of Bruegel, Rubens, and Rembrandt: Highlights from the Collection of the Harvard Art Museums
Authors
William W. Robinson and Susan Anderson
Publisher
Harvard Art Museums (Cambridge, MA, 2016)

Catalogue entry no. 33 by Susan Anderson:

As Alice Davies discovered, this drawing stood for March in one of Allart van Everdingen’s many series of the Twelve Months. The use of a rough sea shows a preference for the stormier, earlier part of the month, as opposed to the warmer temperatures often associated with its more “lamblike” end. Such iconography was a departure from the more commonly used seasonal labors, but was not unique. Everdingen repeated this unconventional theme in a zodiac set sold in 1999 at Christie’s, London,2 in which March is a capriccio of Amsterdam viewed from the waters of the IJ. Precursor Jan van de Velde, especially, provided inspiration in several prints, including a representation of February as a sailboat under a stiff breeze outside Kampen on the Zuiderzee, and a depiction of March with a rainstorm and galelike winds. Everdingen’s second master, Pieter de Molijn, transformed the latter print into a black chalk drawing in Brussels.3 Everdingen also adopted Van de Velde’s habit of blending images of labor and leisure within a Twelve-Month series, especially with wintertime activities: the series to which March: Ships at Sea belongs depicts skaters and kolf players to represent January, whereas April shows spring plowing and sowing.4

Davies initially recognized this monochrome wash series, now dispersed, by verso graphite inscriptions in the same hand, reading “no 42 Everdinge,” or variants thereof, in late seventeenth-century Dutch script on eight drawings previously considered independent landscapes of different seasons and outdoor activities. Each of these relatively large sheets measures approximately 158 × 208 mm, the same as three more drawings lacking the telltale inscriptions, but of similar enough media and iconography to fit within the series. To clinch the deal, she confirmed that the suite was from the same paper stock: among drawings where paper examination is possible, each sheet displays matching horizontal chain lines and spacing and, when visible, a foolscap watermark with double-lined PC countermark. Other Everdingen drawings bear inscriptions in the same hand with different numbers preceding the artist’s name, suggesting that the number 42 refers to the place this series occupied within an unknown collector’s filing system of albums or portfolios. Because March stands for Aries at the beginning of the zodiacal calendar, this drawing was presumably considered first in the group; the relatively substantial price inscribed on the verso, “f 42 10,” therefore likely belongs to the entire set from one of its many sales. The series probably last appeared as a whole in the 1777 sale of Nicolaas Nieuhoff under album Q in seven consecutive lots, each featuring either single or paired drawings. Thereafter, the individual drawings appear to have been dispersed, yet all but October are known today.5

Everdingen’s drawings often elude precise dating, but his painted seascapes of the 1640s form his earliest body of work. A painting from this period in the John G. Johnson Collection, Philadelphia (Fig. 1), displays a generally analogous composition, although the boat faces a different direction.6 Given that the drawings constituting Everdingen’s series of the Months were not clearly related to paintings, however, the Harvard drawing must be considered only as a similarly conceived work and not necessarily from the same moment. The foolscap watermark is comparable to those found in a selection of Rembrandt’s prints, mostly impressions of final states dating from the 1650s (see watermark description under “Inscriptions and Marks”). Although not conclusive, these similarities suggest that March: Ships at Sea and its related months date from the first half of his career.

Notes

1 (This note refers to the provenance.) Alice I. Davies (The Drawings of Allart van Everdingen: A Complete Catalogue, Including the Studies for Reynard the Fox, Doornspijk, Netherlands, 2007, cats. 529 and 531, pp. 365–66, and pp. 40 and 104–5) expertly reconstructed the provenance of this drawing, along with the larger series of the Twelve Months to which it belongs. The series appears to have remained largely intact—despite often having been sold as separate lots—until the sale of Nicolaas Nieuhoff in 1777, where four buyers each claimed a portion of the twelve sheets. The descriptions in this sale catalogue are not detailed enough, however, to know for certain if the series as sold consisted of Everdingen’s original suite or one cobbled together of mismatched sheets, or to know which buyer purchased our drawing. Nonetheless, March: Ships at Sea was sold thereafter as an independent sheet.

2 Davies, cat. 542.

3 Jan van de Velde’s prints are in Hollstein, vol. 33, nos. 35 (February) and 61 (March), pp. 21 and 29 (repr. vol. 34, pp. 24 and 37). For Molijn, see Hans‑Ulrich Beck, Pieter Molyn 1595–1661: Katalog der Handzeichnungen (Doornspijk, Netherlands, 1998), cat. 86, pp. 74–75, repr. Black chalk and gray wash, 147 × 195 mm, Brussels, Koninklijke Musea voor Schone Kunsten van België, 2584. Davies, pp. 102 and 104–5.

4 For Jan van de Velde’s Twelve Months series, see especially Hollstein, vol. 33, nos. 46–57, pp. 24–27, and nos. 58–70, pp. 28–32; and Davies, p. 95 and cats. 529 and 532.

5 Davies, pp. 35, 44–45, and cats. 529–39. The inclusion of the month of June in this series is also questionable. When Davies examined our drawing, the abraded and obscured inscription at the lower left, Maart, had yet to be uncovered by infrared examination. Although not in Everdingen’s hand, this older annotation lends further credence to her iconographic identification.

6 Allart van Everdingen, Rough Sea (Fig. 1). Oil on canvas, 62.9 × 78.6 cm, John G. Johnson Collection, Philadelphia Museum of Art, 587. Alice I. Davies and Frederik J. Duparc, Allart van Everdingen 1621–1675: First Painter of Scandinavian Landscape; Catalogue Raisonné of Paintings (Doornspijk, Netherlands, 2001), cat. 8.

Figures

Acquisition and Rights

Credit Line
Harvard Art Museums/Fogg Museum, Bequest of Charles A. Loeser
Accession Year
1932
Object Number
1932.206
Division
European and American Art
Contact
am_europeanamerican@harvard.edu
Permissions

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Publication History

  • Agnes Mongan and Paul J. Sachs, Drawings in the Fogg Museum of Art, Harvard University Press (Cambridge, 1940), vol. 1, cat. no. 504, p. 267
  • An Exhibition of Dutch and Flemish Drawings and Watercolors, checklist, Unpublished (1954), cat. no. 70, p. 17
  • Alice I. Davies, "Allart van Everdingen" (Ph.D. diss., Harvard University, 1978), Garland Publishers, Inc., pp. ix, 78, repr. fig. 30
  • Konrad Oberhuber, ed., Old Master Drawings: Selections from the Charles A. Loeser Bequest, Fogg Art Museum (Cambridge, MA, 1979), cat. no. 50, pp. 6 and 112-3, repr.
  • George S. Keyes, Mirror of Empire: Dutch Marine Art of the Seventeenth Century, exh. cat., Cambridge University Press (New York, NY, 1990), sub cat. no. 65, p. 225, repr. fig. 65a.
  • Marian Bisanz-Prakken, Die Landschaft im Jahrhundert Rembrandts, exh. cat., Albertina (Vienna, 1993), under cat. no. 81, p. 151 (n. 2)
  • Marian Bisanz-Prakken, Drawings from the Albertina: Landscape in the Age of Rembrandt, exh. cat., Art Services International (Alexandria, Virginia, 1995), under cat. no. 71, p. 151 (n. 2)
  • Carlo Francini, "L'inventario della collezione Loeser alla Villa Gattaia", Bollettino della Società di Studi Fiorentini (2000), no. 6, p. 120 ("Cartella con due stelle d'oro")
  • Alice I. Davies, Allart van Everdingen, 1621-1675: first painter of Scandinavian landscape, catalogue raisonné of paintings, Davaco Publishers (Doornspijk, 2001), pp. 58-–9, repr. fig. 45
  • Alice I. Davies, The Drawings of Allart van Everdingen: A Complete Catalogue, Including the Studies for Reynard the Fox, Davaco Publishers (Doornspijk, 2007), cat. no. 531, p. 366, repr., and pp. 23, 24, 26, 35, 40, 44, 89, and 103-–5.
  • William W. Robinson and Susan Anderson, Drawings from the Age of Bruegel, Rubens, and Rembrandt: Highlights from the Collection of the Harvard Art Museums, Harvard Art Museums (Cambridge, MA, 2016), p. 14; cat. no. 33, pp. 124-126, repr. p. 125; watermark p. 376

Exhibition History

  • Unidentified Exhibition, Smith College Museum of Art, 1944, Smith College Museum of Art, 01/01/1944 - 01/31/1944
  • An Exhibition of Dutch and Flemish Drawings and Watercolors, Fogg Art Museum, Cambridge, 04/01/1954 - 04/30/1954

Subjects and Contexts

  • Dutch, Flemish, & Netherlandish Drawings

Verification Level

This record has been reviewed by the curatorial staff but may be incomplete. Our records are frequently revised and enhanced. For more information please contact the Division of European and American Art at am_europeanamerican@harvard.edu