Adriaen van Ostade (aka Adriaen Jansz. van Ostade)
(1610–1685)
“Slaughter of a
Pig” TIB title (aka “Le Charcutier” Bartsch Title), c1652
Etching on 18th
century laid paper trimmed along the platemark and lined onto washi paper
inlaid into archival wove paper.
Size: (re-margined
sheet) 31.1 x 29.7 cm; (plate) 11.7 x 11.7 cm; (diameter of circular image
borderline) 11.3 cm
Signed on plate
at lower left within the circular image: “AV. ostade”
State vi (of viii)
before the addition of the seven “short, horizontal strokes on the lower left of
the pole on the left side of the composition”, signifying the seventh state, and the horizontal
strokes covering the whole pole, signifying the eighth and final state (see
Leonard J Slatkes et al., 1994, “Adriaen
van Ostade: Etchings of Peasant Life in Holland’s Golden Age”, exh. cat., Georgia
Museum of Art, p. 204; see also an example of the eight state at the British
Museum, no. 1980,U.1680).
TIB 1.41-III (373)
(Walter L Strauss & Leonard J Slatkes [eds.] 1978, “The Illustrated
Bartsch: Netherlandish Artists”, vol.1, p. 352); Hollstein 41; Bartsch I.373.41;
Godefroy 41; Boon-Verbeek 41; Davidsohn 41
The British
Museum offers the following description of this print:
“The
Pigkillers. Night scene with a group of peasants standing at centre, and
watching a pig being slaughtered by a man who kneels on its flank, a woman
holding a pan ready to receive the entrails; in a circle.” (http://www.britishmuseum.org/research/collection_online/collection_object_details.aspx?objectId=3093835&partId=1&searchText=ostade+pig&page=1)
Condition:
well-inked, crisp and well-printed impression in excellent condition within the
circular image borderline, but with significant abrasions and restored losses
in the square margin area. The sheet has been laid upon a washi paper support
sheet and re-margined with the washi paper support sheet having been laminated over
a cradle of archival quality wove paper.
I am selling
this crisp and luminous impression with strong tonal contrast for AU$360 (currently
US$272.62/EUR231.49/GBP204.05 at the time of this listing) including postage
and handling to anywhere in the world.
If you are
interested in purchasing this graphically strong image, please contact me
(oz_jim@printsandprinciples.com) and I will send you a PayPal invoice to make
the payment easy.
This print has been sold
This image of a
peasant family killing a pig in the evening may seem horribly gruesome and
confronting to contemporary eyes—at least to my delicate eyes unaccustomed to seeing
such a scene. Nevertheless, to early Netherlandish viewers acculturated to such
an everyday rural activity, the slaughter may have been perceived not as a
backyard bloodbath as I see it, but as a celebration of and/or anticipation of
the annual holiday of Slachtmaand (the slaughtering month)—November. In fact, I
understand from reading Leonard J Slatkes et al., 1994, “Adriaen van Ostade:
Etchings of Peasant Life in Holland’s Golden Age”, exh. cat., Georgia Museum of
Art (p. 205) that the subject was not simply a scene of slaughter by
candlelight. Instead, it expresses the dual notions of prudentia (prudence) and
vanitas (life’s brevity), as expressed by other printmakers who also depicted
this scene, such as Rembrandt and Pieter Breugel the Elder.
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