Aetas Aurea, Vol. XVIII
Wolfgang Schulz
AERT VAN DER NEER (1604-1677)
Life and Work. With a Catalogue Raisonné of Paintings and Drawings
2002. 4to. 520 pp. text and 416 ills. on 309 plts. (63 in color). Cloth
bound.
ISBN 90-70288-57-5
This comprehensive study confirms Aert van der Neer as
one of the leading figures in seventeenth-century Dutch art. Along with
Hendrik Avercamp, Aert van der Neer painted some of the finest European
winter landscapes, demonstrating his incomparable feeling for light, space
and atmosphere. His masterpieces from around 1660 may be considered the
apogee of Netherlandish art in this genre. Van der Neer's early-morning
scenes show the dedication with which he chose his homeland as the setting
for his paintings. His evening and nocturnal moonlit landscapes are miracles
of colour as regards their beauty and expressiveness. The rigorous examination
and critical analysis of Van der Neer's oeuvre, carried out over the course
of a decade, has enabled the author to produce a well-considered survey
yielding valid conclusions.
Caution has been taken with value judgements and matters of authenticity.
At last, one hundred years after Abraham Bredius expressed the desirability
of publishing Aert van der Neer's oeuvre, this work has been completed.
The catalogue raisonné comprises all works painted
by, or attributed to, the artist and known to the public since 1850. A luxuriously
illustrated reference book, this publication forms the basis for all further
research on the work of Aert van der Neer. The monograph also contains
the results of new investigations into the life and work of such artists
as Jochem and Rafael Camphuysen, Anthonie van Borssom, and others. A choice
of quotations, taken from art-historical assessments made since 1800, completes
the author's appraisal of Aert van der Neer's reputation. Complete bibliographies
for each work, several indexes of former owners and present whereabouts,
and a concordance with Hofstede de Groot's 1918 numbers facilitate the use
of the catalogue by collectors, art dealers and art historians.
Wolfgang Schulz (Friedrichstrasse 218, 10969 Berlin), born in 1943 in East Prussia, was formerly a member
of the staff of both the Printroom and the Picture Gallery of the Staatliche
Museen zu Berlin, and has worked at the Mauritshuis in The Hague. He has
also served as director of several cultural institutions. His previous publications
include monographs on Lambert Doomer (1974), Cornelis Saftleven (1978)
and Herman Saftleven (1982).