December 9, 2009

Hendrick Goltzius' 'Jupiter and Antiope'

Artdaily.org - The First Art Newspaper on the Net: "
Hendrick Goltzius' 'Jupiter and Antiope' Among Highlights of Sotheby's Sale




Hendrick Goltzius, 'Jupiter and Antiope', 1612. (122 x 178 cm.), 48 x 70 inches. Est. $8/12 million. Photo: Sotheby's.

A monumental masterpiece (48 x 70 in. (122 x 178 cm)) by the great 17th century Dutch artist
Hendrick Goltzius will be offered early next year in Sotheby’s sale of Important Old Master
Paintings in New York on 28 January 2010. Goltzius’ paintings are extremely rare and Jupiter
and Antiope is the most important by the artist to appear at auction in more than 25 years
est. $8/12 million, £4.8/7.3 million). Executed in 1612, the painting was formerly in the collection
of Abraham Adelsberger (1863-1940), a German Jew who was one of the most successful toy
manufacturers of the early 20th century. In the year following Adelsberger’s death, his
son-in-law was forced to sell the painting to the Nazi leader Hermann Göring to ensure the
safety of his family. The painting was recovered by the Allied forces in 1945 and sent to the
Dutch Government. Over the course of the next 64 years, the painting was loaned to three
institutions in the Netherlands, including the Frans Hals Museum in Haarlem, where it hung
from 1985 until this year. In March 2009, the painting was restituted to the heirs of its original
owner, Abraham Adelsberger. Prior to exhibition and sale in New York in January, the painting
will be exhibited at Sotheby’s London from 4 –9 December 2009.


George Wachter, Co-Chairman of Sotheby’s Old Master Paintings Department Worldwide said,
“As Goltzius only started painting in 1600 and died seventeen years later, only a limited number
of significant oils were executed by this great master and the present work ranks among his
greatest. It evokes an enormous reaction due to its size and subject matter, and the impact
of its eroticism speaks for itself.”


Hendrick Goltzius (1558-1617)

In 1600, when he abandoned printmaking and began painting, Goltzius was the most famous
engraver in the Netherlands and perhaps all of Europe. His style had evolved from the extreme
contortions of Haarlem Mannerism toward the more classicizing influence of Italy, where he
had lived from 1590 to 1591. However, it was painting, not printmaking, that was considered
the highest art form, and at the dawn of the new century Goltzius decided to take up the
challenge of working in a new medium. In the seventeen years before his death he painted
more than 50 pictures and was soon recognized as the premiere painter in Haarlem, surpassing
his rival Cornelis Cornelisz. van Haarlem. Paintings by Goltzius can be found in major museum
collections including the Rijksmuseum, The Los Angeles County Museum, the National Gallery
of Art, Washington, D.C., the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, and the Fitzwilliam Museum,
Cambridge, among others. The first major retrospective of the artist’s work was organized
by the Metropolitan Museum of Art, The Toledo Museum of Art and the Rijksmuseum in 2003.

Jupiter and Antiope

Jupiter and Antiope is one of a number of large-scale paintings of nudes that Goltzuis executed
between 1600 and 1617. In the present mythological scene, Goltzius captures the moment before
Antiope, the beautiful daughter of Nycteus and Thebes, was seduced by Jupiter in the form of
a satyr. The highly charged scene depicts Antiope asleep on her bed, propped up by a stack
of gorgeously-colored cushions. She is naked apart from her earrings, a pearl necklace and a
tiny strip of fabric that accentuates rather than hides her nudity. At her feet kneels Jupiter in
the form of a satyr, his look and attitude that of a half-wild creature consumed by lust. He
stares fixedly at Antiope, his mouth in a rigid grin and his arms and back tensed, literally ready
to pounce. In his right hand he holds an apple and some pears - an offering to Antiope – which,
like the grapes in the foreground, are symbols of fertility. Scattered throughout the composition
are other references to the event that is about to occur, including the inverted slippers beside
Jupiter's knee and the overturned chamber pot, both of which represent female sexual organs.
In the background of the painting is a somewhat ambiguous figure – a young satyr - who holds
his left index finger to his lip while lightly pinching Antiope’s nipple. Scholars have debated
the meaning of the gesture – possibly communicating caution to Jupiter to be quiet, or perhaps
he is pointing at his mouth symbolizing Jupiter’s intent to devour Antiope.

Provenance

Abraham Adelsberger was born on 23 April 1863 in Hockenheim, Germany. He established
himself as one of the most successful manufacturers of tin-plate toys in the early 20th century,
while at the same time nurturing a passion for art and building an impressive gallery at his home
in Nuremberg. As fears for his safety increased, he fled Germany in 1938 and joined his daughter
and her family in Amsterdam - managing to take several of his paintings with him, including
Jupiter and Antiope. Following his death two years later, his son-in-law was forced to sell the
painting to Hermann Göring to ensure the safety of his family. His family went into hiding from
1943 onwards and all survived. Adelsberger’s wife, Clothilde, was deported to Bergen-Belsen,
but also survived the concentration camp and the war. Göring, who assembled one of the mos
t important collections of Old Masters in Europe at the time, had at least four works by or
attributed to Goltzius in his collection, of which the present work was the most important.
He took the painting to Carinhall, his country retreat in the north of Brandenburg, and in early
1945, he ordered the evacuation of his entire art collection to protect it from the advancing
Russian forces. The following year, the painting was recovered by the Allied forces and taken
to the Central Collecting Point in Munich. From there, as was the common practice, the painting
was returned to the country from which it has been stolen - the Netherlands. Over the course
of the next several decades, the painting was loaned to several Dutch institutions including the
Kunsthistorisch Institute, Utrecht (1952-78), the Groningen Museum, Groningen (1979-85) and
the Frans Hals Museum (1985-2009), which was particularly apt given that Goltzius lived much
of his adult life in Haarlem. In March 2009, the painting was restituted to the heirs of Abraham
Adelsberger by the Dutch government.





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