Not on display
Wikimedia Commons

Juno with a Sceptre and a Peacock

Jan Philipsz van Bouckhorst (1588 - 1631)

Artist/Maker

Former attribution: Andries Both (1612 - 1642)

Material / Technique

Pen and brown ink, brown wash on paper

Dimensionsh x w: Mått 18,3 x 9,9 cm

Inventory numberNMH 144/1973

AcqusitionDonated 1973 (through the estate of Pontus de la Gardie)

Other titlesTitle (sv): Juno Title (en): Juno with a Sceptre and a Peacock

DescriptionDescription: Pen and brown ink, brown wash, 183 x 100 mm. Ruled framing lines in brown ink. Stains. Laid down. Inscribed in the lower right corner, in pen and brown ink, Abo(l …?), monogrammed. Mark of J. G. De la Gardie (Lugt 2722a). On the verso of the mount, inscribed in pencil with a monogram ATSS, perhaps referring to Albert of Saxe-Teschen (Lugt 178c: incorrectly attributed to a “Count Sparr”). This and the following two drawings were catalogued by Bartsch as by Andries Both. They are clearly part of the same series of naked goddesses. The style is very close to a series of drawings by Bouckhorst in Munich, all signed and dated 1622, among them a standing nude Minerva with her attributes. The Munich drawings are more finished. It is possible that the Stockholm drawings belong to an earlier stage in the artist’s work on the same series; the figure of Venus with Cupid by her side is varied in the following two drawings. [Magnusson, Dutch Drawings no. 92]

Collection

Geographical origin

Geographical origin: Holland (Kingdom of the Netherlands)

MaterialInk, Paper

TechniqueDrawing, Wash drawing

Object category