Rusttijd voor de paarden - Buiig weer op het Buitenhof te Den Haag Rusttijd voor de paarden - Buiig weer op het Buitenhof te Den Haag

W.H.P.J. (WILLEM) DE ZWART 1862 The Hague (The Netherlands) - 1931 The Hague (The Netherlands) Rusttijd voor de paarden - Buiig weer op het Buitenhof te Den Haag

Oil / Canvas: 47 x 97 cm


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Artist
W.H.P.J. (WILLEM) DE ZWART1862 The Hague (The Netherlands) - 1931 The Hague (The Netherlands)
Title
Rusttijd voor de paarden - Buiig weer op het Buitenhof te Den Haag
Material & Technique
Oil / Canvas
Measurements
Width: 97 cm
Height: 47 cm
Signature
Rechtsonder gemerkt "W. de Zwart"
Provenance
Kunsthandel L.J. Krüger, Den Haag [Brunt 1911; oud stempel spieraam]
Collectie J. Hageraats, Amsterdam [zie 1924, 1942]
Collectie Boerma (ca. 1950 gekocht bij Hageraats Boerma, daarna vererfd aan de kinderen)
Exhibitions
Tentoonstelling van Schilderijen en Aquarellen van W. de Zwart., Pulchri Studio, Den Haag, 8 - 28 april 1932, Bijeengebracht door P.J. Zürcher en L.J. Krüger nr. 43 ‘Trampaarden in den regen (n.t.k.)’
‘Honderd jaar Nederlandsche schilderkunst’, Haags Gemeentemuseum, augustus - september 1942, cat.nr. 120 ‘Trampaarden’ (J. Hageraats, Den Haag)
‘Suze Robertson en Willem de Zwart’, Haags gemeentemuseum, 30 januari - 29 februari 1932, cat.nr. 78 ‘Aapjeskoetsiers Buitenhof’ (J. Hageraats, Amsterdam)
‘Eere-tentoonstelling Willem de Zwart’, Villa Erica, Den Haag, mei - juni 1910, cat.nr. 45 ‘Aapjeskoetsiers Buitenhof’ met afbeelding (J. Hageraats, Den Haag)
Literature
A. Brunt, ‘Willem de Zwart’, [juni-juli] 1911, Eigen Haard, p. 536, met afbeelding p. 533
Nieuwe Rotterdamsche Courant, 17 januari 1924
‘Kunsthandel Hageraats’, 2 september1942, Het Vaderland
‘Suze Robertson en Willem de Zwart. Twee boeiende overgangsfiguren’.
Date
ca. 1890 - 1891
Category
Paintings

Over W.H.P.J. (WILLEM) DE ZWART

Willem de Zwart grew up in a modest family. His father was a painter of carriages, and after high school young Willem was apprenticed to him. It is probably from here that his interest in carriages and horses was born. Meanwhile, he proved to be a talent for drawing and joined the studio of Jacob Maris, who took him into his care. In the line of Maris, De Zwart developed into a painter of landscapes and cityscapes, but was also a painter of figures, animals and still lifes. During these formative years, De Zwart entered the thriving artist circles of the last decades of the 19th century and met Willem Tholen, Suze Robertzon and Isaac Israels, among others. He worked with George Breitner for some time and he learned how to work with contrasting colors by working with him. In 1889, de Zwart settled with his young family on Beeklaan on the border of Loosduinen near The Hague. The Beeklaan turned out to be a true painters' colony where many representatives of the Hague School had taken up residence. In the Loosduinse and Beeklaan years, important works by de Zwart were created. His work gained increasing recognition, also internationally. In 1896 de Zwart began working on a contract basis on behalf of the Amsterdam art dealer van Wisselingh, where his work was regularly shown until 1910. Willem de Zwart was a restless man who would move much in his life. His melancholic nature was not helpful to the restlessness. However, his paintings became increasingly colorful as he grew older. He remained a sociable man who was member of several artists' associations. His work can be found in several important museums in the Netherlands, Belgium and in large private collections.