Christie's. Old Master Paintings and Sculpture: Part II, New York, 31 january 2024
Jan van Kessel, Roses, a tulip, a peony, a cherry blossom and a centaurium in a glass vase on a ledge
Lot 148. Jan van Kessel (Antwerpt 1626-1679) and modern hand, Roses, a tulip, a peony, a cherry blossom and a centaurium in a glass vase on a ledge, oil on copper, set in panel, a fragment, 39 x 26.5 cm. Price realised USD 17,640 (Estimate USD 10,000 – USD 15,000). © Christies 2024
Provenance: Anonymous sale; Hôtel Drouot, Paris, 9 April 1990, lot 47.
Literature: K. Ertz and C. Nitze-Ertz, Jan van Kessel der Ältere 1626-1679; Jan van Kessel der Jüngere 1654-1708; Jan van Kessel der ‘Andere’ ca. 1620-ca. 1661: Kritische Kataloge der Gemälde, Lingen, 2012, p. 325, no. 554, illustrated, as on panel.
Note: In his Het Gulden Cabinet vande Edel Vry Schilder-Const (The Golden Cabinet of the Noble Liberal Art of Painting) of 1662, Cornelis de Bie described Jan van Kessel I as a ‘painter very renowned in flowers’. Van Kessel initially trained in the workshop of the Antwerp history painter Simon de Vos before completing his studies under his maternal uncle, Jan Brueghel II.
The present painting once formed the upper left portion of a floral cartouche with the Virgin and Child at center which was cut down in the second half of the twentieth century. The upper right corner, which was also latterly made into a floral bouquet, was likewise published by Klaus Ertz (op. cit., no. 510). A nearly identical arrangement of flowers appears in another floral cartouche by van Kessel which was also cut down and subsequently made into a floral bouquet (for this painting, see F.G. Meijer, 'Twee is niet altijd meer dan één / Two is not always more than one', RKD Bulletin, 1997, pp. 16-17).


