The Apple Picker The Apple Picker

J.TH. (JAN) TOOROP 1858 Purworejo (Indonesia) - 1928 The Hague (The Netherlands) The Apple Picker

Oil / Canvas: 50 x 41 cm


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Details

From 1903 until 1922, Jan Toorop used to visit the bathing resort of Domburg in Zeeland nearly every summer for short or long periods of time. There he painted the landscape and the farming population in their typical traditional costumes. In our painting, we see the daughter of the family where he stayed working in the orchard. The entire work is composed of a tangle of short, brightly coloured stripes. The direction of the stripes shapes forms and depth. Toorop managed to use this technique to evoke the feeling in us of a lovely summer day and the coolness in the shade under the trees.

Artist
J.TH. (JAN) TOOROP1858 Purworejo (Indonesia) - 1928 The Hague (The Netherlands)

Title
The Apple Picker

Material & Technique
Oil / Canvas

Measurements
Height: 50 cm

Width: 41 cm

Signature
Signed lower right "J.Th. Toorop"

Provenance
Collection Fritz Meyer before 1926, Zürich, Zwitserland

Sale A.W.M. Mensing (Frederik Muller & Cie), lot no. 26, Amsterdam, 13-7-1926

Private collection The Netherlands

Kunstgalerij Albricht, Velp, 1998

Private collection The Netherlands, since 1999

Exhibitions
'Kunst als Passie', Het Slot Zeist, Zeist, Dec. 1998 - Jan. 1999

'Jan Toorop', Het Valkhof Museum, Nijmegen, 2009

Marie Tak van Poortvliet Museum, Domburg, 2011

Literature
Jubileumtentoonstelling 'Kunstgalerij Albricht, 'Kunst als Passie', 1998, Zeist, p. 106, 107 (ill.)

F. van Vloten, A. Groeneveld, R. Smithuis,, "Nieuw Licht! Jan Toorop en de Domburgsche Tentoonstellingen 1911-1921", 2011, Domburg, p. 72-73 (ill.)

Th. Bodewes, 'Een zoektocht naar Jan Toorop, deel 2: werken uit de periode 1891-1910', 2009, p. 57, no. 64 (ill.)

Category
Paintings

Over J.TH. (JAN) TOOROP

Jan Toorop was pivotal in the web of the Dutch and European art world in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. He gave an important push to the renewal of art in the Netherlands because of his contacts with foreign artists, but also by publicizing the work of Vincent van Gogh. He introduced new art movements, such as Art Nouveau, Symbolism and Pointillism. Toorop was often the first to adopt new styles and techniques, incorporate them in his own way and pass on to artists at home and abroad. He was, as the only Dutchman, a member of the progressive artists' association Les Vingt in Brussels. In England he discovered the Pre-Raphaelites and the Arts and Crafts movement, which greatly influenced his monumental and symbolist work. In 1887 he went to Paris with the Belgian painter James Ensor, where he saw the work of the pointillists Georges Seurat and Paul Signac and immediately adapted it into his own work. In doing so, he had a huge influence on Jan Sluijters, Leo Gestel and Piet Mondrian. Jan Toorop was the one, who first introduced pointillism and then divisionism in the Netherlands; later continued and further developed in a different form by Jan Sluijters (1881-1957), Leo Gestel (1881-1941) and Piet Mondrian (1872-1944). Toorop, due to his regular stays in Belgium and his close contacts with artists in Brussels, was the only Dutchman invited to join the avant-garde group "Les XX" in the early 1980s. Prominent artists such as James Ensor (1860-1949), Theo van Rijsselberghe (1862-1926), Fernand Khnopff (1858-1921), Henry van de Velde (1863-1957), Félicien Rops (1833-1898) and Georges Lemmen (1865-1916) were part of "Les XX." Toorop served more or less as an intermediary between the Netherlands and Belgium: he ensured that artists of the Hague School could exhibit in Belgium and, in reverse, he introduced the Netherlands to new movements of our southern neighbors. Every year he sent work to the exhibitions of "Les XX." The influence of Ensor's work in the early years of the group on Toorop is striking. Both his subjects and his use of the palette knife were derived from Ensor. Zeeland, and in particular Domburg on Walcheren, was a seaside resort where Toorop spent many summer months in the early years of the 20th century, organizing exhibitions and inviting like-minded people to the resort. Toorop's divisionism, also called block-pointille, consisted of short detached paint strokes, mostly applied in unmixed colors, creating a mosaic-like structure. The painting "Young peasant woman picking apples" is a good example of this technique. Toorop was living in Amsterdam in 1905, where his new style of painting would become the forerunner of the movement a year later would be called Amsterdam Luminism, with Sluijters, Gestel and Mondrian, among others, as representatives, who would work in this style until 1911.