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    • Huybrecht Beuckelaer (Flemish, c. 1535/40-1605/1624) A fruit and vegetable, poultry and game seller with the Old Church of Delft bey...
      Sep. 11, 2019

      Huybrecht Beuckelaer (Flemish, c. 1535/40-1605/1624) A fruit and vegetable, poultry and game seller with the Old Church of Delft bey...

      Est: £20,000 - £30,000

      Huybrecht Beuckelaer (Flemish, c. 1535/40-1605/1624) A fruit and vegetable, poultry and game seller with the Old Church of Delft beyond signed and dated lower left 'Huberius Beuckelaer 15(?8)5' oil on canvas h:135 w:101 cm Provenance: According to the present vendor, acquired by a member of their family, circa 1960, at a local auction, probably Pascal and Cann of Colchester Born in Antwerp and trained alongside his brother Joachim in the workshop of their uncle, Pieter Aertsen, Huybrecht Beuckelaer drew upon Aertsen's style and subject matter. He went on to join the successful workshop of his brother, Joachim, who established his reputation as a painter of kitchen and genre scenes. Due to the scarce documentation of Huybrecht's career, his works were previously attributed to his brother Joachim or Aertsen. Previously known as the anonymous "Monogrammist HB", it was not until 1997 that Huybrecht was definitively established as the author of a small number of works signed "HB". His identity and work was discussed by Dr Margreet Wolters in 'De Monogrammist HB geïdentificeerd: Huybrecht Beuckeleer', in: P. van den Brink, L.M. Helmus (red.), Album Discipulorum J.R.J. van Asperen de Boer, Zwolle 1997, 231-238. His earliest known work, The First Passover Feast, dated 1563, was only identified and sold as recently as 26th of May 2005 (lot 61) at Sotheby's in New York. Huybrecht is believed to have trained in Bronzino's workshop in Florence and worked as an assistant in the studio of Antonis de Mor. For a full discussion of his life and his coming to live in London, see both Josua Bruyn, "Hubert (Huybrecht) Beuckelaer, an Antwerp portrait painter, and his English patron, the Earl of Leicester", Juliette Roding and Eric Jan Sluijter, Dutch and Flemish artists in Britain 1550-1750, Leids Kunsthistorisch Jaarboek 13, 2003, pp. 85-112; and Elizabeth Goldring, Robert Dudley, Earl of Leicester, and the World of Elizabethan Art: Painting and Patronage at the Court of Elizabeth I, Yale University Press, 2014, pp. 129-132, 163-164, 292. Unlike his better known brother, Huybrecht Beuckelaer is known to have travelled widely in France and probably was in Florence (see above). The last reference to him in Antwerp is in 1584 - an outstanding debt from his time in Bordeaux. It is likely that he had already left for England - though he may have come back briefly before he is definitely recorded in London in 1586 (see Bruyn, 2003, p. 92), where he probably (as a Protestant) went due to the political and religious turmoil in Antwerp at this precise time. He may well have been encouraged to go to London by the promise of - or hoped for - commissions from the Earl of Leicester (1532-1588). Leicester, who had been in the Spanish Netherlands accompanying Elizabeth I's failed suitor the Duke of Anjou when the latter was appointed Regent by Philip II, is known not only to have been painted along with his wife by Huybrecht Beuckelaer (see Bruyn, p. 91) but by 1583 market scenes with figures are recorded in the Inventory of Leicester House (see Goldring, p. 292). That the present painting is dated '15(?8)5' at the very moment that Huybrecht is probably already in London, means it has almost certainly remained ever since in this country, or, if it was painted in Antwerp on his brief return to that city, then he could well have brought it back with him to England. Huybrecht Beuckelaer is presumed to have remained and died in England, as the 'Daniell Buckler' recorded in the Parish of St Giles in the Fields, London, in 1625, is almost certainly his son by his first wife, born in Antwerp in the 1560s (see Goldring, p. 129). We are grateful to Dr Elizabeth Goldring for her assistance with this catalogue entry and to Dr Margreet Wolters for her thoughts on the form of the signature and the attribution to Huybrecht.

      Cheffins
    • BEUCKELAER, HUYBRECHT(circa 1530 Antwerp before 1625)
      Mar. 27, 2015

      BEUCKELAER, HUYBRECHT(circa 1530 Antwerp before 1625)

      Est: CHF12,000 - CHF15,000

      BEUCKELAER, HUYBRECHT (circa 1530 Antwerp before 1625) The Passion. Oil on panel. Monogrammed lower right: HB. 77.8 x 103.5 cm. Provenance: - Kunsthandel Richard Larsen, Brussels, 1929. - Swiss private collection. Literature: - Kreidl, Detlev: Joachim Beuckelaer und der Monogrammist HB, in: Oud Holland 90 (1976), 162-183, p. 162, 178-180, Cat No.6 p. 183, fig. 10 p. 177. - Wolters, Margreet: De Monogrammist HB geïdentificeerd: Huybrecht Beuckeleer', in: P. van den Brink, L.M. Helmus (red.) Album Discipulorum J.R.J. van Asperen de Boer, Zwolle 1997, p. 231. - Saur, Allgemeines Künstlerlexikon. Die Bildenden Künstler aller Zeiten und Völker, supplement Vol. 3, Munich, Leipzig 2008, p. 92. - Wolters, Margreet: Met kool en crijt'. De functie van de ondertekening in de schilderijen van Joachim Beuckelaer, Diss. Rijksuniversiteit Groningen 2011, p. 293 and p. 301. Registered at RKD, The Hague, as by the hand of Huybrecht Beuckelaer No. 53661. BEUCKELAER, HUYBRECHT (um 1530 Antwerpen vor 1625) Passion Christi (Simon von Cyrene hilft Christus beim Tragen des Kreuzes). Öl auf Holz. Unten rechts monogrammiert: HB. 77,8 x 103,5 cm. Provenienz: - Kunsthandel Richard Larsen, Brüssel, 1929. - Schweizer Privatsammlung. Literatur: - Kreidl, Detlev: Joachim Beuckelaer und der Monogrammist HB, in: Oud Holland 90 (1976), 162-183, S. 162, 178-180, Katalog Nr. 6 auf S. 183, Abb. 10 auf S. 177. - Wolters, Margreet: De Monogrammist HB geïdentificeerd: Huybrecht Beuckeleer', in: P. van den Brink, L.M. Helmus (red.) Album Discipulorum J.R.J. van Asperen de Boer, Zwolle 1997, S. 231. - Saur, Allgemeines Künstlerlexikon. Die Bildenden Künstler aller Zeiten und Völker, Nachtrag Band 3, München, Leipzig 2008, S. 92. - Wolters, Margreet: Met kool en crijt'. De functie van de ondertekening in de schilderijen van Joachim Beuckelaer, Diss. Rijksuniversiteit Groningen 2011, S. 293 und S. 301. Das Gemälde ist im RKD, Den Haag, als eigenhändiges Werk von Huybrecht Beuckelaer unter der Nummer 53661 registriert.

      Koller Auctions
    • ATTRIBUE A HUYBRECHT BEUCKELAER (ACTIF A ANVERS VERS 1560-1584)
      Oct. 16, 2013

      ATTRIBUE A HUYBRECHT BEUCKELAER (ACTIF A ANVERS VERS 1560-1584)

      Est: €80,000 - €120,000

      ATTRIBUE A HUYBRECHT BEUCKELAER (ACTIF A ANVERS VERS 1560-1584) Mûres, cerises, poires, melon et autres fruits, panais, pain, fromages et une gauffre, roemer, tazza et salière sur une table drapée huile sur panneau 81,5 x 137 cm. (32 x 54 in.)

      Christie's
    • HUYBRECHT BEUCKELAER
      Jan. 26, 2012

      HUYBRECHT BEUCKELAER

      Est: $180,000 - $220,000

      ACTIVE IN ANTWERP 1563-AFTER 1584 THE FIRST PASSOVER FEAST signed with monogram HB lower right above the amphora, dated on the column at center Aυo .1563 and inscribed EXODIυ .12 oil on panel 41 1/4 by 39 in.; 105 by 99 cm

      Sotheby's
    • Huybrecht Beuckeleer (Antwerp c. 1535/40-c. 1605/25)
      Dec. 09, 2009

      Huybrecht Beuckeleer (Antwerp c. 1535/40-c. 1605/25)

      Est: £60,000 - £80,000

      Huybrecht Beuckeleer (Antwerp c. 1535/40-c. 1605/25) A game-seller at market oil on panel 44½ x 31 7/8 in. (115.6 x 80.9 cm.)

      Christie's
    • PROPERTY OF THE HEIRS OF THE LATE DR. RUDOLF BERL HUYBRECHT BEUCKELAER ACTIVE IN ANTWERP
      May. 26, 2005

      PROPERTY OF THE HEIRS OF THE LATE DR. RUDOLF BERL HUYBRECHT BEUCKELAER ACTIVE IN ANTWERP

      Est: $250,000 - $350,000

      PROPERTY OF THE HEIRS OF THE LATE DR. RUDOLF BERL HUYBRECHT BEUCKELAER ACTIVE IN ANTWERP 1563-AFTER 1584 THE FIRST PASSOVER FEAST signed with monogram HB lower right above the amphora, dated on the column at centre 1563 and inscribed EXODI XII oil on panel PROVENANCE with Colnaghi & Eckford, London, by whom sold to Henry Burgh, Cheltenham, at whose sale acquired by George Pearse, Cheltenham, a Major in the Royal Artillery, by June 1869 (according to note written by him and attached to the reverse); Anonymous sale, Berlin, Lepke, March 22nd, 1910, lot 49 (as by Beukeleer); Anonymous sale, Amsterdam, Frederik Muller, April 25th, 1911, lot 77 (as by The Monogrammist HB); Dr. Rudolf Berl (1884-1963), an industrialist who lived in the Palais Rudolf Gutmann, Vienna, until 1939; Transported from Austria after the Anschluss by the Dutch merchant, Job Thole, to Huizen, near Amsterdam, whence collected by Berl's agent in the Netherlands, Alfred Seidl, and deposited for storage with Ulrix, Brussels; Acquired from Ulrix by Kayetan Mühlman on October 21st, 1941 and transported to Berlin by December (vide Mühlmann's label on the reverse); Sold by Mülhmann to Field Marshal Hermann Göring for RM 3,200 on December 6th, 1941 and deposited in Carinhall, Göring's residence; Captured with the rest of Göring's collection in a train by American troops and taken to the Munich Collecting Point, whence moved to the Netherlands in 1946-7; The Instituut Collectie Nederland (earlier the Stichting Nederlands Kunstbezit, no. NK 2646) until restituted to Dr. Berl's heir in 2002. EXHIBITED Roosendaal, Roosendaal Museum, from 1949, on loan until returned to the Hague in 1975; 's-Hertogenbosh, Noordbrabants Museum, no. 172, on loan from the Stichting Nederlands Kunstbezit; Maastricht, Bonnefantenmuseum, on loan from the Instituut Collectie Nederland and included in the Museum's exhibition, Het 'glijk van de achterkant, 1999, no. 30. LITERATURE AND REFERENCES J. Sievers, "Joachim Beuckelaer", Jahrbuch der Königlich Preussischen Kunstsammlungen, 32, 1911, p. 185ff, as Joachim Buckelaer; The H. Lunsingh Scheurleer, "Pieter Aertsen en Joachim Beuckelaer en hun ontleeningen aan Serlio's architectuurprenten", Oud Holland, 62, 1947, p. 130, fig. 8, as Joachim Beuckelaer; D. Kreidl, "Joachim Beuckelaer und die Monogrammist HB", Oud Holland, 90, 1976, p. 162ff, as the Monogrammist HB; D. Kreidl, "Der Monogrammist HB, Ein Niederländer in der Bronzino Werkstatt", Wiener Jahrbrüch der Kunstgeschichte, 34, 1981, pp. 165ff, as the Monogrammist HB; Rijksdienst Beeldende Kunst, Old Master Paintings, An Illustrated Summary Catalogue, 1992, p. 39, as Joachim Beuckelaer; M. Wolters, "De Monogrammist HB geidentificeerd: Huybrecht Beuckeleer", Album Discipulorum J.R.J. van Asperen de Boer, 1997, pp. 231 and 236, note 2; R. van Wegen, catalogue of the exhibition, Het 'Gelijk' van de Achterkant, Bonnefantenmuseum, Maastricht, 1999, no. 3, as Huybrecht Beuckeleer; Die Kunstsammlung des Reichsmarschalls Hermann Göring by Guenther Haase, Edition q, 2000, p. 278 (listed in inventory of property seized from Göring by the US Army on 4 August 1945, as "Beukelaar, Joachim, Easter Feast, (Muhlmann Coll., Berlin Dec 1941) (KG-887)"; J. Bruyn, "Hubert (Huybrecht) Beyckelaer, an Antwerp portrait, and his English patron, the Earl of Leicester", Juliette Roding and Eric Jan Sluijter, Dutch and Flemish artists in Britain 1550-1750, Leids Kunsthistorisch Jaarboek 13, 2003, pp. 85-112. CATALOGUE NOTE The author of this impressive panel is the rare, and only recently identified Flemish master, Huybrecht Beuckelaer, the younger brother of Joachim Beuckelaer and native of Antwerp. Although his name is a fairly recent discovery, his artistic personality was first defined as long ago as 1976 by Detlev Kreidl, under the moniker the Monogrammist HB (see Literature below). Kreidl associated a small group of works with this then anonymous master including the Prodigal Son Feasting with Harlots, in the Musées Royaux de Beaux Arts, Bruxelles (see Catalogue Inventaire de la Peinture Ancienne, 1984, p. 336, no. 3438) and The Kitchen Maid with Helpers, also in the same museum collection in Brussels. Attributed over the years to both Joachim Beuckelaer and Aertsen, both works were found to bear the monogram Hb. Then in 1997, after infra-red reflectography was conducted on The Kitchen Maid with Helpers, the signature "Beuckler" and a date of 1570/(6?) was uncovered on the picture next to the more familiar monogram HB. This discovery helped identify the "so-called" Monogrammist HB as Huybrecht Beuckelaer, the younger brother of Joachim Beuckelaer the well known painter of kitchen and market scenes. The present work was for many years attributed to Joachim and there is even a certificate from Gustav Glück dated 3 November, 1927, in which he attributes the picture to Joachim Beuckelaer. Born into an Antwerp family of painters, probably in the late 1530s, Huybrecht Beuckelaer produced his earliest known works in the 1560s. The present panel, dated 1563, actually represents the earliest known work by his hand. Like his better known brother Joachim, Huybrecht is believed to have received his early training in the studio of Pieter Aertsen. By the early 1560s, Aertsen had left for Amsterdam and Joachim was successfully running his production of kitchen and market scenes. It is unclear what role Huybrecht played in the studio, but what is evident is that Joachim and Huybrecht's early works indicate that they were both heavily influenced in their output by Aertsen and adopted both his stylistic idiom and manner of painting, making it at times difficult to distinguish the pupils from their master, particularly in the case of Joachim. In Kreidl's discussion of the "Monogrammist HB," he noted the stylistic differences between his work and that of Joachim, noting that the Monogrammist's figures were more statuesque and sculptural in handling (see Literature below). Kreidl also argues a similarity between the Monogrammist HB's works and portraits from the circle of the Florentine painter Bronzino. The sculptural treatment of his figures and the crisp modelling of his faces does belie the influence of the Florentine master. Shortly after this picture was painted, in 1567, Huybrecht was said to be 'travelling in various foreign countries in order to see the land and learn the language, and to practise his trade as a painter and thus earn his living (...)' (see Wolters 1997 Literature below). Although Kreidl suggests that possibly he trained in Bronzino's workshop as early as the mid- 1550s, although there is no known documentary evidence to support this theory (see Kreidel Literature below for further discussion of this subject). The observation of various textures and patterns also suggests the influence of Anthonis Mor, with whom he is thought to have possibly collaborated in the early 1560s in Antwerp. There is a portrait in the Mauritshuis of an unknown man which is signed and dated Mor 1561. It is generally believed that only the head was painted by Mor, and the rest by an assistant. Josua Bruyn (see Literature below) proposes that the assistant could plausibly be Huybrecht Beuckelaer. A comparison with The Prodigal Son and the rendering of fabrics in the present work gives support to this idea ( for further discussion of this subject see Josua Bruyn, "Hubert (Huybrecht) Beuckelaer, an Antwerp portrait painter, and his English patron, the Earl of Leicester", Oud Holland, 2003, pp. 85-90). Huybrecht like his brother employed a formula already used by Aertsen in the early 1550s, a high viewpoint, allowing every aspect of, in this case, the Passover Feast to be explained in detail. The relatively large-scale of this composition in which the figures are almost life-like positioned in the immediate foreground, is clearly indebted to the colorful naturalism of Aertsen's later works of this type. The scene is dominated by these large, very handsome figures distributed on all levels of the pictorial space and connected by eye contact and individual gestures as they gather together around the feast table. Huybrechts, delicate treatment of the figures is here more elegant and idealized than Aertsen's or his brother Joachim. The architectural setting for the present Feast scene with the ornate architectural elements, is borrowed directly from Sebastiano Serlio's treatise on architecture, Regole generale, as Reglen en Metselrijen, which was published in parts from 1537 and translated into Dutch by Pieter Coecke van Aelst and published in Antwerp, 1539-50. Huybrecht specifically repeats the design for the Corinthian fireplace with caryatid supports at front, which is a motif that Aertsen had similarly incorporated in his 1552 Christ in the House of Martha and Mary, in the Kunsthistorisches Museum, Vienna. This print was also quoted by Joachim in his Christ in the House of Martha and Mary in the Musées Royaux de Beaux Arts, Bruxelles. It is interesting to note that the present picture was painted in the same year as Joachim's Christ in the House of Mary and Martha. Huybrecht is not recorded as becoming a master in the Antwerp Guild of St. Luke until 1579, when he is listed on the guild books as the son of "Mattheus de Beuckelaer." In his later life he is recorded as having been active as a merchant in Antwerp, thus possibly explaining the rarity of his works. Huybrecht and Joachim appear to have had no immediate followers in Antwerp, but their work found favour in Northern Italy in the latter part of the 16th century inspiring Vincenzo Campi in Cremona and Bartolomeo Passarotti and Annibale Carracci in Bologna in their depiction of both market and kitchen scenes. The subject of the present work is rather rare in early Flemish art. Passover Feasts were more frequently depicted in manuscript illustrations. When the theme of Passover is found in a painting it is often used in the context of an altarpiece with other Old Testament scenes such as the Meeting of Abraham and Melchizedeck and the Gathering of the Manna, scenes that were meant to prefigure the Last Supper or, in particular, the Eucharist. One such extant example of an early Flemish master treating the subject is Dieric Bouts, Altarpiece of the Holy Sacrament in which the lower left wing depicts a scene of a Passover Feast. This Altarpiece now hangs in the Collegiate Church of St. Peter, Louvain (for a reproduction see Dirk Bouts: een Vlaams primitief te Leuven, Leuven 1998, p. 242-343, no. 23). Huybrecht dutifully depicts the Lord's instructions to the Israelites as described in Exodus, Chapter XII, concerning the institution of the Passover Feast. Moses and Aaron declared to the Israelites in Egypt, that the Lord had decreed that all Israelites were to eat roast lamb, unleavened bread and bitter herbs in preparation for their departure to Egypt. The participants are not seated as the Lord prescribed that the meal was to be eaten in haste, 'with [their] loins girded, their shoes on [their] feet and [their] staffs in their hands' preparing for their imminent departure from Egypt. The child depicted in the foreground could represent a possible allusion to the prophecy that children would later ask the meaning and significance 'of this service' (Exodus, XII: 26).

      Sotheby's
    • Huybrecht Beukeleer (active Antwerp 1563-after 1584)
      Jan. 24, 2003

      Huybrecht Beukeleer (active Antwerp 1563-after 1584)

      Est: $400,000 - $600,000

      The First Passover Feast signed with monogram, dated '1563' and inscribed 'EXODI XII' oil on panel 411/4 x 39 in. (105 x 99 cm.) PROVENANCE with Colnaghi & Eckford, London, by whom sold to Henry Burgh, Cheltenham, at whose sale acquired by George Pearse, Cheltenham, a Major in the Royal Artillery, by June 1869 (according to a note written by him and attached to the reverse). Anon. Sale, Lepke, Berlin, 22 March 1910, lot 49, as Joachim Beuckelaer. Anon. Sale, Frederik Muller, Amsterdam, 25 April 1911, lot 77, as The Monogrammist HB. Dr. Rudolf Berl (1884-1963), an industrialist who lived in the Palais Rudolf Gutmann, Vienna, until 1939. Transported from Austria after the Anschluss by the Dutch merchant, Job Thole, to Huizen, near Amsterdam, whence collected by Berl's agent in the Netherlands, Alfred Seidl, and deposited for storage with Ulrix, Brussels. Acquired from Ulrix by Kayetan Mhlmann, 21 October 1941, and transported to Berlin by December ( vide Mhlmann's label on the reverse). Sold by Mhlmann to Field Marshal Hermann G”ring for RM 3,200 on 6 December 1941 and deposited in Carinhall, G”ring's residence. Captured with the rest of G”ring's collection in a train by American troops and taken to the Munich Collecting Point, whence moved to the Netherlands in 1946-7. The Instituut Collectie Nederland (earlier the Stichting Nederlands Kunstbezit, no. NK 2646) until restituted to Dr. Berl's heir in 2002. LITERATURE J. Sievers, 'Joachim Beuckelaer', Jahrbuch der k”niglich preussischen Kunstsammlungen, 32, 1911, pp. 185 ff., as Joachim Beuckelaer. The H. Lunsingh Scheurleer, 'Pieter Aertsen en Joachim Beuckelaer en hun ontleeningen aan Serlio's' architectuurprenten', Oud Holland, 62, 1947, p. 130, fig. 8, as Joachim Beuckelaer. D. Kreidl, 'Joachim Beuckelaer und die Monogrammist HB', Oud Holland, 90, 1976, pp. 162 ff., as the Monogrammist HB. D. Kreidl, 'Der Monogrammist HB, Ein Niederl„nder in der Bronzino Werkstatt', Jahrbrch fur Kunstgeschichte, 34, 1981, pp. 165 ff., as the Monogrammist HB. Rijksdienst Beeldende Kunst, Old Master Paintings, An Illustrated Summary Catalogue, 1992, p. 39, no. 172, as Joachim Beuckelaer. M. Wolters, 'De Monogrammist HB geidentificeerd: "Huybrecht Beuckeleer"', Album Discipulorum J.R.J. van Asperen de Boer, 1997, pp. 231 and 236, note 2. R. van Wegen, catalogue of the exhibition, Het 'glijk' van de achterkant, Bonnefantenmuseum, Maastricht, 1999, no. 3, as Huybrecht Beuckeleer. EXHIBITION Roosendaal Museum, Roosendaal, from 1949, on loan until returned to the Hague in 1975. 's-Hertogenbosh, Noordbrabants Museum, no. 172, on loan from the Stichting Nederlands Kunstbezit. Maastricht, Bonnefantenmuseum, on loan from the Instituut Collectie Nederland, and included in the Museum's exhibition, Het 'glijk' van de achterkant, 1999, no. 30. NOTES For long attributed to Joachim Beuckelaer (although the attribution was implicitly rejected in the sale catalogue of 1911), the present work was first detached from his oeuvre by Kreidl, who ascribed it along with a Prodigal Son in the Mus‚es Royaux des Beaux-Arts de Belgique, Brussels ( Catalogue Inventaire de la Peinture Ancienne, 1984, p. 336, no. 3438) and a Christ on the Way to Calvary (present whereabouts unknown) to an anonymous master: the Monogrammist H.B. This master was identified as the hitherto unknown Huybrecht Beuckeleer as a result of an infra-red reflectographic examination of The Cook with Helpers also in the Mus‚es Royaux, Brussels ( ibid., p. 2, no. 2526), earlier attributed by Kreidl to the Monogrammist HB, which revealed the name 'Bukeler' and the date 1570 or 1576. This 'Bukeler' is to be identified with the Huybrecht Beuckeleer, who became a master in the Antwerp guild of St. Luke in 1579 as the son of 'Mattheus de Beuckeleer.' His father had become a master in the guild in 1535; he was also the father of the renowned Joachim. In 1567 Huybrecht was recorded as travelling in different countries; by the following year he was back in Antwerp. He was later recorded as a merchant. The present work was executed long before Bueckeleer became a master in his own right, and must therefore have been painted in his father's or brother's studio. Beuckeleer shows himself to be up-to-date in architectural fashion, by borrowing from a print in the Antwerp edition of Serlio's Regole generale, as Reglen en Metselrijen printed in 1549, in which he repeats the design for the Corinthian fireplace. Aertsen had used the motif in his 1552 Christ in the House of Martha and Mary (Vienna, Kunsthistorisches Museum), and Joachim was to use the print, illustrating the Ionic fireplace, in the Brussels Christ in the House of Martha and Mary executed in the same year as the Passover Feast. It was painted three years after his brother became a master in the guild, having been the pupil of Pieter Aertsen, and has clear affinities with Joachim's and Aertsen's styles. The subject is rare although Passover feasts were more frequently depicted in manuscript illustrations. The only precedent whose whereabouts is known would seem to be Dieric Bout's treatment in the lower part of the left wing of the Altarpiece of the Holy Sacrament in the Collegiate Church of St. Peter, Louvain (M.J. Friedl„nder, Early Netherlandish Painting, III, comments and notes by N. Veron‚-Verhaegen, Leiden, 1968, p. 61, pls. 26 and 30). Beuckeleer accurately depicts the Lord's instructions concerning the institution of the Passover Feast, relayed by Moses and Aaron to the Israelites in Egypt as described in Exodus, chapter 12. The Lord decreed that the Israelites were to eat roast lamb, unleavened bread and bitter herbs 'with [their] loins girded, their shoes on [their] feet and [their] staffs in their hands' prior to their departure from Egypt, following the Lord's passing over the homes of the Israelites as he destroyed all the first born in Egypt. The participants are not seated as the Lord prescribed that the meal was to be eaten in haste. The child in the foreground alludes to the prophecy that children would later ask the meaning 'of this service' ( Exodus, XII: 26).

      Christie's
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