‘By His Hand’: The Paradox of Seventeenth-Century Connoisseurship
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 15 January 2021
Summary
Introduction
The question of whether seventeenth-century painters and connoisseurs had a different understanding of authenticity than we do today, has been the cause of much debate. Several scholars have even wondered if present-day connoisseurship is anachronistic in its efforts to distinguish the hand of a seventeenth-century master from those of his assistants and pupils. For was it not common for a seventeenth-century master to collaborate with his assistants and to sell the various studio products under his own name?
Nowadays connoisseurs tend to differentiate sharply between what is believed to be purely autograph work with paintings done in part or entirely by assistants, which can make for a price difference of several millions of dollars. Yet, among scholars there is no consensus as to whether such a distinction agrees with seventeenth-century categories of thought.
Seventeenth-century connoisseurs were certainly interested in attaching names to paintings. In fact, attributing pictures seems to have been an entertaining pastime among the upper echelons of society in Europe. For example, the British King James I reputedly removed the labels from his paintings to see if his courtiers could guess the artists. A letter sent from Paris by the Dutch scientist and art lover Christiaan Huygens to his brother Constantijn in The Hague shows that these rather playful attribution debates were not an exclusively British phenomenon. After visiting the Flemish dealer Valcourt with a group of Parisian connoisseurs, Christiaan wrote to his brother on 1 June 1668:
‘You would have had unparalleled pleasure to see [the collector-connoisseur] Jabach determine the authenticity of those [Valcourt’s] pieces with a magisterial complacency; only to conclude in the end that out of 300 drawings that were given to Raphael there were but two originals. I would give a good thing to see him censure yours and that you were [listening in from] behind the tapestry. When we were at his place, there was also no shortage of ‘controllers’, of which I was one of the minor figures, who challenged the attribution of what he [Jabach] believed to be true Giulio Romanos and Raphaels, which drove him into a rage that made us all laugh, so much so that there would be hardly any comedy that would equal such a conference’.
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- Information
- Art Market and ConnoisseurshipA Closer Look at Paintings by Rembrandt, Rubens and Their Contemporaries, pp. 31 - 67Publisher: Amsterdam University PressPrint publication year: 2008