After his artistic training, Cornelis van Poelenburgh travelled to Rome where he joined the Bentvueghels, a brotherhood of artists from the Northern and Southern Netherlands. Around 1625, he returned to Utrecht, where he set up a studio. In the beginning he mainly made figure studies in red chalk, such as these, which are related to his later paintings. Some of these studies were made from live models.
Van Poelenburgh mainly painted landscapes with themes from classical mythology, classical history and non-classical literature. This drawing probably served as a study for one of his paintings with bathing figures. Either for his landscapes with only bathing naked women or with Diana bathing with her nymphs. Depicted are two studies of a naked woman. She appears to be sitting on a rock by the water with her back turned away from the viewer. Unfortunately, no exact match has yet been found to a specific painting.
Specifications
| Title | Two Sketches of a Naked Woman |
|---|---|
| Material and technique | Red chalk, watercolour |
| Object type |
Drawing
> Two-dimensional object
> Art object
|
| Location | This object is in storage |
| Dimensions |
Height 140 mm Width 268 mm |
|---|---|
| Artists |
:
Cornelis van Poelenburch
|
| Accession number | CvP 1 (PK) |
| Credits | From the estate of F.J.O. Boijmans, 1847 |
| Department | Drawings & Prints |
| Acquisition date | 1847 |
| Creation date | in circa 1614-1667 |
| Collector | Collector / F.J.O. Boijmans |
| Material | |
| Object | |
| Geographical origin | The Netherlands > Western Europe > Europe |
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