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Bartholomäus Bruyn d. Ä., zugeschriebenHeiliger Bischof

In Meisterwerke der Sammlung Bischoff / Masterpie...

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Bartholomäus Bruyn d. Ä., zugeschriebenHeiliger Bischof
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Bartholomäus Bruyn d. Ä., zugeschrieben
Heiliger Bischof

Öl und Tempera auf Eichenholz. 62 x 23 cm.

Provenienz
Auktion Dorotheum, Wien, 4.12.1973, Lot 18 (als Porträt des Hl. Ursicinus).

Literatur
Corinna Peuckert, in: Ekkehard Mai (Hg.): Das Kabinett des Sammlers, Köln 1993, S. 8-10, Kat.-Nr. 4 mit Abb.

Die Tafel bildete wohl ursprünglich den Flügel eines kleinen Altars und zeigt vor einem landschaftlichen Hintergrund einen stehenden Bischof in vollem pontifikalem Ornat. Das ihm beigegebene Attribut der Lilie ermöglicht es nicht, den Heiligen eindeutig zu benennen; vorgeschlagen wurde eine Identifizierung als Hl. Ursicinus. Die noch ganz spätgotische Auffassung in der Darstellung des prachtvollen Ornats lässt an die repräsentative Prachtentfaltung der Heiligen in der Kölner Maltradition denken, wie auch zum Beispiel der um 1500/1503 entstandene "Altar der Heiligen Sippe" (Köln, Wallraf-Richartz-Museum, Inv.-Nr. 165) nicht nur in Gewandgestaltung und Figurenauffassung, sondern auch in den Gesichtstypen eine nahe Verwandtschaft mit unserer Tafel zeigt. Ihre Landschaftsdarstellung in ihrer dunklen Tonigkeit und der Wiedergabe bizarrer Felsformationen hingegen verweist auf den niederrheinisch-niederländischen Raum als weiteren Einflussbereich.
Als Meister unserer Tafel, die somit kölnische und niederländische Anregungen vereint, ist Bartholomäus Bruyn d. Ä. vorgeschlagen worden. Vom Niederrhein stammend lernte er in der Malerwerkstatt von Jan Joest van Kalkar, um dann 1512 nach Köln überzusiedeln, wo er zunächst in der Werkstatt des Meisters von St. Severin tätig war. Mit dem Hochaltar für die Stiftskirche in Essen entstand 1522-1525 sein erstes Hauptwerk, seit der Mitte der dreißiger Jahre wurde er jedoch besonders mit seinen Portraitgemälden weit über Köln hinaus bekannt und berühmt. Unsere Tafel ist in ihrer Gestaltung in die Jahre um 1520 zu datieren, so dass sie in die frühe Kölner Zeit von Bartholomäus Bruyn d. Ä. fallen würde.





Bartholomäus Bruyn the Elder, attributed to
A Bishop Saint

Oil and tempera on oak panel. 62 x 23 cm.

Provenance
Anonymous sale, Dorotheum, Vienna, 4 December 1973, lot 18 (as portraying St. Ursicinus).

Literature
Corinna Peuckert, in: Ekkehard Mai (ed.): Das Kabinett des Sammlers, Cologne 1993, pp. 8-10, no. 4, reproduced.

The panel was possibly once a wing of a small altar and depicts a bishop in full pontifical regalia standing in front of a landscape. His given attribute of the lily does not enable the saint to be named, but an identification as Saint Ursinicus has been suggested. The late gothic interpretation of grand vestments is reminiscent of the representative display of splendour of the saints in the Cologne painting tradition such as the Altar der Heiligen Sippe, or Altarpiece of the Holy Kinship (Cologne, Wallraf-Richartz-Museum, inv. No. 165). This altarpiece dated 1500/1503, shows a close relationship to our panel not only in the design of the robes and interpretation of the figures but also in the stylistic treatment of faces. With its dark tonality and rendition of the bizarre rock formations on the other hand, the composition of the landscape refers to the Lower Rhine-Netherlandish region as a further sphere of influence.
Combining thus Cologne and Netherlandish influences, Batholomäus Bruyn the Elder has been proposed as the master of our panel. From the Lower Rhine region, he trained in the workshop of Jan Joest van Kalkar before moving to Cologne in 1512 where he was initially active in the workshop of the Master of St. Severin. His first major work was the high altar of the collegiate church in Essen, created in 1522-1525, but from the mid-1530s he became known and famous far beyond Cologne in particular for his portrait paintings. Our panel is to be dated in its composition to circa 1520, falling therefore into the early Cologne period of Batholomäus Bruyn the Elder.





Bartholomäus Bruyn d. Ä., zugeschrieben
Heiliger Bischof

Öl und Tempera auf Eichenholz. 62 x 23 cm.

Provenienz
Auktion Dorotheum, Wien, 4.12.1973, Lot 18 (als Porträt des Hl. Ursicinus).

Literatur
Corinna Peuckert, in: Ekkehard Mai (Hg.): Das Kabinett des Sammlers, Köln 1993, S. 8-10, Kat.-Nr. 4 mit Abb.

Die Tafel bildete wohl ursprünglich den Flügel eines kleinen Altars und zeigt vor einem landschaftlichen Hintergrund einen stehenden Bischof in vollem pontifikalem Ornat. Das ihm beigegebene Attribut der Lilie ermöglicht es nicht, den Heiligen eindeutig zu benennen; vorgeschlagen wurde eine Identifizierung als Hl. Ursicinus. Die noch ganz spätgotische Auffassung in der Darstellung des prachtvollen Ornats lässt an die repräsentative Prachtentfaltung der Heiligen in der Kölner Maltradition denken, wie auch zum Beispiel der um 1500/1503 entstandene "Altar der Heiligen Sippe" (Köln, Wallraf-Richartz-Museum, Inv.-Nr. 165) nicht nur in Gewandgestaltung und Figurenauffassung, sondern auch in den Gesichtstypen eine nahe Verwandtschaft mit unserer Tafel zeigt. Ihre Landschaftsdarstellung in ihrer dunklen Tonigkeit und der Wiedergabe bizarrer Felsformationen hingegen verweist auf den niederrheinisch-niederländischen Raum als weiteren Einflussbereich.
Als Meister unserer Tafel, die somit kölnische und niederländische Anregungen vereint, ist Bartholomäus Bruyn d. Ä. vorgeschlagen worden. Vom Niederrhein stammend lernte er in der Malerwerkstatt von Jan Joest van Kalkar, um dann 1512 nach Köln überzusiedeln, wo er zunächst in der Werkstatt des Meisters von St. Severin tätig war. Mit dem Hochaltar für die Stiftskirche in Essen entstand 1522-1525 sein erstes Hauptwerk, seit der Mitte der dreißiger Jahre wurde er jedoch besonders mit seinen Portraitgemälden weit über Köln hinaus bekannt und berühmt. Unsere Tafel ist in ihrer Gestaltung in die Jahre um 1520 zu datieren, so dass sie in die frühe Kölner Zeit von Bartholomäus Bruyn d. Ä. fallen würde.





Bartholomäus Bruyn the Elder, attributed to
A Bishop Saint

Oil and tempera on oak panel. 62 x 23 cm.

Provenance
Anonymous sale, Dorotheum, Vienna, 4 December 1973, lot 18 (as portraying St. Ursicinus).

Literature
Corinna Peuckert, in: Ekkehard Mai (ed.): Das Kabinett des Sammlers, Cologne 1993, pp. 8-10, no. 4, reproduced.

The panel was possibly once a wing of a small altar and depicts a bishop in full pontifical regalia standing in front of a landscape. His given attribute of the lily does not enable the saint to be named, but an identification as Saint Ursinicus has been suggested. The late gothic interpretation of grand vestments is reminiscent of the representative display of splendour of the saints in the Cologne painting tradition such as the Altar der Heiligen Sippe, or Altarpiece of the Holy Kinship (Cologne, Wallraf-Richartz-Museum, inv. No. 165). This altarpiece dated 1500/1503, shows a close relationship to our panel not only in the design of the robes and interpretation of the figures but also in the stylistic treatment of faces. With its dark tonality and rendition of the bizarre rock formations on the other hand, the composition of the landscape refers to the Lower Rhine-Netherlandish region as a further sphere of influence.
Combining thus Cologne and Netherlandish influences, Batholomäus Bruyn the Elder has been proposed as the master of our panel. From the Lower Rhine region, he trained in the workshop of Jan Joest van Kalkar before moving to Cologne in 1512 where he was initially active in the workshop of the Master of St. Severin. His first major work was the high altar of the collegiate church in Essen, created in 1522-1525, but from the mid-1530s he became known and famous far beyond Cologne in particular for his portrait paintings. Our panel is to be dated in its composition to circa 1520, falling therefore into the early Cologne period of Batholomäus Bruyn the Elder.




Meisterwerke der Sammlung Bischoff / Masterpieces from the Bischoff Collection

Auktionsdatum
Ort der Versteigerung
Neumarkt 3
Köln
50667
Germany

Für Kunsthaus Lempertz Versandinformtation bitte wählen Sie +49 (0)221 9257290.

Wichtige Informationen

25 % buyer's premium on the hammer price
(20 % on the part of the hammer price exceeding 400,001 EUR)

3 % live provision plus 16 % VAT

AGB

standard | standard



Conditions of sale
1. The art auction house, Kunsthaus Lempertz KG (henceforth referred to as Lempertz), conducts public auctions in terms of § 383 paragraph 3 sentence 1 of the Commercial Code as commissioning agent on behalf of the accounts of submitters, who remain anonymous. With regard to its auctioneering terms and conditions drawn up in other languages, the German version remains the official one.
2. The auctioneer reserves the right to divide or combine any catalogue lots or, if it has special reason to do so, to offer any lot for sale in an order different from that given in the catalogue or to withdraw any lot from the sale.
3. All lots put up for sale may be viewed and inspected prior to the auction. The catalogue specifications and related specifications appearing on the internet, which have both been compiled in good conscience, do not form part of the contractually agreed to conditions. These specifications have been derived from the status of the information available at the time of compiling the catalogue. They do not serve as a guarantee in legal terms and their purpose is purely in the information they provide. The same applies to any reports on an item’s condition or any other information, either in oral or written form. Certificates or certifications from artists, their estates or experts relevant to each case only form a contractual part of the agreement if they are specifically mentioned in the catalogue text. The state of the item is generally not mentioned in the catalogue. Likewise missing specifications do not constitute an agreement on quality. All items are used goods.
4. Warranty claims are excluded. In the event of variances from the catalogue descriptions, which result in negation or substantial diminution of value or suitability, and which are reported with due justification within one year after handover, Lempertz nevertheless undertakes to pursue its rights against the seller through the courts; in the event of a successful claim against the seller, Lempertz will reimburse the buyer only the total purchase price paid. Over and above this, Lempertz undertakes to reimburse its commission within a given period of three years after the date of the sale if the object in question proves not to be authentic.
5. Claims for compensation as the result of a fault or defect in the object auctioned or damage to it or its loss, regardless of the legal grounds, or as the result of variances from the catalogue description or statements made elsewhere due to violation of due dilligence according to §§ 41 ff. KGSG are excluded unless Lempertz acted with wilful intent or gross negligence; the liability for bodily injury or damages caused to health or life remains unaffected. In other regards, point 4 applies.
6. Submission of bids. Lempertz reserves the right to approve bidders for the auction and especially the right to make this approval dependent upon successful identification in terms of § 1 para. 3 GWG. Bids in attendance: The floor bidder receives a bidding number on presentation of a photo ID. If the bidder is not known to Lempertz, registration must take place 24 hours before the auction is due to begin in writing on presentation of a current bank reference. Bids in absentia: Bids can also be submitted either in writing, telephonically or via the internet. The placing of bids in absentia must reach Lempertz 24 hours before the auction to ensure the proper processing thereof. The item must be mentioned in the bid placed, together with the lot number and item description. In the event of ambiguities, the listed lot number becomes applicable. The placement of a bid must be signed by the applicant. The regulations regarding revocations and the right to return the goods in the case of long distance agreements (§ 312b-d of the Civil Code) do not apply. Telephone bids: Establishing and maintaining a connection cannot be vouched for. In submitting a bid placement, the bidder declares that he agrees to the recording of the bidding process. Bids via the internet: They will only be accepted by Lempertz if the bidder registered himself on the internet website beforehand. Lempertz will treat such bids in the same way as bids in writing.
7. Carrying out the auction: The hammer will come down when no higher bids are submitted after three calls for a bid. In extenuating circumstances, the auctioneer reserves the right to bring down the hammer or he can refuse to accept a bid, especially when the bidder cannot be successfully identified in terms of § 1 para. 3 GWG. If several individuals make the same bid at the same time, and after the third call, no higher bid ensues, then the ticket becomes the deciding factor. The auctioneer can retract his acceptance of the bid and auction the item once more if a higher bid that was submitted on time, was erroneously overlooked and immediately queried by the bidder, or if any doubts regarding its acceptance arise. Written bids are only played to an absolute maximum by Lempertz if this is deemed necessary to outbid another bid. The auctioneer can bid on behalf of the submitter up to the agreed limit, without revealing this and irrespective of whether other bids are submitted. Even if bids have been placed and the hammer has not come down, the auctioneer is only liable to the bidder in the event of premeditation or gross negligence. Further information can be found in our privacy policy at www.lempertz.com/ datenschutzerklärung.html
8. Once a lot has been knocked down, the successful bidder is obliged to buy it. If a bid is accepted conditionally, the bidder is bound by his bid until four weeks after the auction unless he immediately withdraws from the conditionally accepted bid. From the fall of the hammer, possession and risk pass directly to the buyer, while ownership passes to the buyer only after full payment has been received.
9. Up to a hammer price of € 400,000 a premium of 25 % calculated on the hammer price plus 16 % value added tax (VAT) calculated on the premium only is levied. The premium will be reduced to 20 % (plus VAT) on any amount surpassing € 400,000 (margin scheme). On lots which are characterized by N, an additional 7 % for import tax will be charged. On lots which are characterized by an R, the buyer shall pay the statutory VAT of 16 % on the hammer price and the buyer’s premium (regular scheme). Exports to third (i.e. non-EU) countries will be exempt from VAT, and so will be exports made by companies from other EU member states if they state their VAT identification number. For original works of art, whose authors are either still alive or deceased for less than 70 years (§ 64 UrhG), a charge of 1.8 % on the hammer price will be levied for the droit de suite. The maximum charge is € 12,500. For payments which amount to EUR 10,000.00 or more, Lempertz is obliged to make a copy of the photo ID of the buyer according to §3 of the German Money Laundry Act (GWG). This applies also to cases in which payments of EUR 10,000.00 or more are being made for more than one invoice. If a buyer exports an object to a third country personally, the VAT will be refunded, as soon as Lempertz receives the export and import papers. All invoices issued on the day of auction or soon after remain under provision.
10. Successful bidders shall forthwith upon the purchase pay to Lempertz the final price (hammer price plus premium and VAT) in Euro. Bank transfers are to be exclusively in Euros. The request for an alteration of an auction invoice to a person other than the bidder has to be made immediately after the auction. Lempertz however reserves the right to refuse such a request if it is deemed appropriate. The transfer is subject to successful identification (§ 1 para. 3 GWG) of the bidder and of the person to whom the invoice is transferred. Invoices will only be issued to those persons actually responsible for settling the invoices.
11. In the case of payment default, Lempertz will charge 1% interest on the outstanding amount of the gross price per month.. If the buyer defaults in payment, Lempertz may at its discretion insist on performance of the purchase contract or, after allowing a period of grace, claim damages instead of performance. In the latter case, Lempertz may determine the amount of the damages by putting the lot or lots up for auction again, in which case the defaulting buyer will bear the amount of any reduction in the proceeds compared with the earlier auction, plus the cost of resale, including the premium.
12. Buyers must take charge of their purchases immediately after the auction. Once a lot has been sold, the auctioneer is liable only for wilful intent or gross negligence. Lots will not, however, be surrendered to buyers until full payment has been received. Without exception, shipment will be at the expense and risk of the buyer. Purchases which are not collected within four weeks after the auction may be stored and insured by Lempertz on behalf of the buyer and at its expense in the premises of a freight agent. If Lempertz stores such items itself, it will charge 1 % of the hammer price for insurance and storage costs.
13. As far as this can be agreed, the place of performance and jurisdiction is Cologne. German law applies; the German law for the protection of cultural goods applies; the provisions of the United Nations Convention on Contracts for the International Sale of Goods (CISG) are not applicable. Should any provision herein be wholly or partially ineffective, this will not affect the validity of the remaining provisions.
Regarding the treatment of personal data, we would like to point out the data protection notice on our website.
Henrik Hanstein, sworn public auctioneer

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