Hendrick Avercamp, Game of kolf on the ice

Game of kolf on the ice

Overview

Creator - Hendrick Avercamp (1585 - 1634)

Creation date - c. 1620

Materials - Pen and brown ink with brown wash, watercolour, red chalk and bodycolour over traces of graphite

Dimensions - 17.6 x 23.8 cm

Hier is duidelijk te zien hoe de kolfspeler naar een paaltje speelt: kolf dus!

Acquirer:
George III, King of the United Kingdom (1738-1820)

Provenance:
Lot D216 in the Abraham van Broyel sale, Amsterdam, 30 October 1759; bought by Pieter Yver (fl.59 with D215); first recorded in a Royal Collection inventory of c.1810 (Inv. A, p. 118: '42. Drawings of some Master in the Stile of Breughel, representing the Diversions of the Dutch and Flemish on the Ice &c: with some Drawings of single figures for the Dresses only')

Description:
A drawing of a scene on the ice, with a man on the left, watched by a peasant in a cap, about to putt a ball towards a marker. He is watched by a group of elegantly dressed figures and a dog on the right. A woman skates forward from the centre. In the background are two sleighs and a sledge drawn by caparisoned horses, and numerous skaters and walkers.

The deaf-mute Hendrick Avercamp, based in the provincial Dutch town of Kampen, was the first Netherlandish artist to specialise in paintings (and drawings) of winter scenes. Here he has drawn a game of kolf op het ijs, the winter version of kolf in which players hit a ball towards a pole; the fashionable costumes of the onlookers suggest a date of around 1620. The Royal Collection holds roughly one-third of Avercamp’s surviving drawings, many attractively finished in watercolour and probably made to be sold rather than as studies for paintings. That was no doubt the immediate purpose of the present drawing, although the figure of the man playing kolf and the sleigh in the background are to be found in a circular painting by Avercamp of a winter landscape in the Kunsthalle, Hamburg.

Michiel Plomp has identified in the Royal Collection around sixty drawings that were included in the auction of Abraham Van Broyel’s collection, held in Amsterdam on 30 October 1759 and succeeding days. These were among over a hundred Dutch and Flemish drawings acquired at the sale by the dealer Pieter Yver (1712-87), who, if not acting directly for the Prince of Wales, presumably sold the group of sixty to the Prince (or King) shortly thereafter. The present drawing was probably one of a pair by Avercamp in the van Broyel sale. Each was described as ‘A Winter scene with many figures, drawn with washes, height 5, width 8 inches’; the second drawing depicts Two ladies and a gentleman on a horse-drawn sleigh, the measurements of which correspond closely with those given in the sale catalogue.

Royal Collection, Royal Library, Windsor Castle (6470)

Literatuur

• Het kolfboek van Drechterland door Mark Aberkrom

Source: Robin Bargmann