Donkey Ride on the Beach, Scheveningen Donkey Ride on the Beach, Scheveningen

I.L. (ISAAC) ISRAELS 1865 Amsterdam - 1934 The Hague Donkey Ride on the Beach, Scheveningen

Oil / Panel: 37,5 x 46 cm


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Details

A moment in motion: Isaac Israels' Donkey Ride on the Beach

Painted around the early 20th century, Donkey Ride on the Beach by Dutch impressionist Isaac Israels captures a fleeting yet evocative moment of seaside leisure. Set on the coast of Scheveningen, a popular beach resort near The Hague, the painting reflects the artist's fascination with modern life, movement, and the human figure in natural light.

The composition centers on a young child with her sister or mother - likely from an upper-middle-class familiy - perched atop a donkey. The soft, almost spontaneous brushwork and the muted tones of sand and sky place the scene in a breezy, sunlit atmosphere. Israels masterfully blends figure and setting, using loose, expressive strokes to evoke not only the physical motion of the donkey's stride but also the carefree spirit of a holiday by the sea.

Unlike traditional portraiture or genre painting of the time, Israels' approach is observational and immediate. Influenced by French Impressionism and contemporaries like Edgar Degas, Israels painted en plein air, allowing natural light and daily life to shape his canvas. His interest in fleeting scenes of urban life positioned him as a key figure in the Amsterdam Impressionism movement.

Donkey Ride on the Beach is more than a depiction of a child's seaside amusement; it is a testament to Israels' ability to seize a moment in time - informal, everyday, and yet enduringly poetic.

Artist
I.L. (ISAAC) ISRAELS1865 Amsterdam - 1934 The Hague

Title
Donkey Ride on the Beach, Scheveningen

Material & Technique
Oil / Panel

Measurements
Height: 37,5 cm

Width: 46 cm

Signature
Signed lower right "Isaac Israels"

Provenance
Art gallery E.J. van Wisselingh & Co., Amsterdam

Collection A. Boersma and dr. W.L. Ladenius, Haarlem, 1956

Private collection The Netherlands

Exhibitions
"Isaac Israels", Museum voor Stad en Ommelanden (Groninger Museum), Groningen, 3 March - 1 April 1956, cat.no. 9, as: Dame en kind op strandezels

"Isaac Israels", Stedelijk Museum De Lakenhal, Leiden, 7 April - 7 May 1956, cat.no. 9, as: Dame en kind op strandezels

"Isaac Israels", Provinciaal Museum, Den Bosch, 12 May - 9 June1956, cat.no. 9, as: Dame en kind op strandezels

Literature
Tentoonstellingscatalogus "Isaac Israels", 1956, Groningen, Leiden, Den Bosch, no. 9 (ill.)

Comp. to Anna Wagner, "Isaäc Israels", 1967, Rotterdam, no. 59 (Donkey-ride on Scheveningen Beach)

Saskia de Bodt, Jeroen Kapelle, John Sillevis e.a., "Isaac Israels. Hollands impressionist", 1999, Rotterdam, p. 8 and 9 (picture of the artist in his studio)

Date
ca. 1905

Category
Paintings

Over I.L. (ISAAC) ISRAELS

Isaac Israels was the only son of the painter Jozef Israels. The family moved from Amsterdam to The Hague in 1871. Isaac also received his training at the academy at the same time as George Breitner, Floris Verster and Marius Bauer, among others. He was a promising artist from an early age and won awards for his paintings. In the '80s, Isaac specialized in military subjects, an interest he shared with Breitner and Verster. Despite this promising start, he felt his education was not yet complete and went to Amsterdam, where he was accepted into the circle of the Tachtigers. Turbulent city life became the common thread through his work. Between 1887 and 1894, things were quiet around him: few paintings are known from this period. Starting in the mid-1890s, Israels went back to The Hague in the summers where he and his father would paint at the beach. They rented a villa in Scheveningen. His paintings of donkey-riding children were crowd pleasers and are still extremely popular. Israels joked that selling a painting was "the Highest of Arts." His donkey-riding children were eagerly purchased at high prices, and can be considered highlights of his oeuvre for just that reason. Isaac Israels was not only the virtuoso painter of modern (city) life, he was also a gifted portraitist. Especially in the last phase of his life, he commissioned portraits of important Dutchmen. Even in this genre, women remained his favorite subject. All his life he preferred to draw and paint maids, Amsterdam street girls, telephone operators, mannequins in department stores and nude models. His portraits of women are also highlights of his oeuvre, such as of the spy Mata Hari, the first female doctor Aletta Jacobs and the actress Fie Carelsen. Isaac Israels was accustomed to giving a quick characterization of his models. A crisp characterization had to appear on the canvas at once. As such, his best paintings are vivid, spontaneous and struck just right. 'I had an attack of patriotism the other day when I looked out my window to my surprise. Surely the Hollandsche is to my mind the most beautiful thing there is,' Isaac Israels on his way to London from Hamburg to the painter Willem Witsen. That did not prevent him from traveling up and down the continent. Israels always loved to travel. Even as a child, he went to Paris with his parents every year. He made trips to Italy, Spain and North Africa, Switzerland, Spain and Scandinavia to draw and paint. In the 1920s, he even spent some time in the Dutch East Indies. Starting in 1903, Israels had his own studio in Paris, where he found his favorite subjects among fashionable Parisians and was able to immerse himself in the modern art on display there. In the spring of 1913, he traded that city for London, where he had his own studio for a time. Despite all the travel and all the impressions, Israels always remained himself. He was a neighbor to Picasso in Paris, went into town with Kees van Dongen, admired the symbolist Odilon Redon and for a time had one of Vincent van Gogh's Sunflowers on his wall. All these modern impressions, however, did not allow him to be diverted from his laboriously developed path. After his Amsterdam years, his palette became lighter and his subjects more mundane, but he stuck to his virtuoso impressionist style until his death. In 1923 he settled permanently on Koninginnegracht in The Hague, where he had left his father's studio vacant until long after his death.