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Record price for a Rubens' painting
01 July 2002



Cet article se compose de 3 pages.
1 2 3
A rediscovered painting by 17th Century Flemish master Peter Paul Rubens titled “The Massacre of the Innocents” fetched a stunning price of 49,5 million sterling (US $ 76,7 millions) during a sale held in London by Sotheby's on July 10th 2002.

This 142 x 182 cm oil on panel, which carried only an estimate of between $ 5,8 and 8,7 million dollars, was bought by Sam Fogg, a London dealer specialising in manuscripts, on behalf of a collector.While this record bid has been the highest ever reached for a work by an Old Master it has however been suggested that the final buyer might be the Getty Museum.

This impressive work has been recently rediscovered and was known only through a reference to it in an Antwerp inventory of 1689, together with a correspondence between the Forchondt brothers prior to and after its sale by them to the Prince of Liechtenstein in Vienna, probably in 1702 or shortly before and through a studio replica adapted to a slightly different format in Brussels.

In the 1763 Liechtenstein inventory it was listed as by Frans de Neve together with a “Samson and Delilah”- in fact also by Rubens- as by Jan van den Hoecke and, in the inventory of 1780, by which time both pictures were hanging in neighbouring rooms, and in subsequent inventories until 1873, it appeared as by Van den Hoecke.

From the second half of the 19th Century, the painting had always been known as by Jan van den Hoecke until its correct identification in the late 2001. In this it has much in common with the “Samson and Delilah” bought by the National Gallery in London in 1982, which is a key work in the understanding of “The Massacre of the Innocents”. Both works date from almost exactly the same point in Rubens' career (between 1609 and 1611) and they were sold by the Forchondt brothers to Prince Johann Adam Andreas von Liechtenstein around 1698 or shortly after and both were mis-identified in the Liechtenstein inventories as by the late Rubens follower Jan van den Hoecke (1611-1651). The “Samson and Delilah”, sold by the Liechtensteins in circa 1880, was recognised as by Rubens in the 1920s, but the work sold by Sotheby's was still assumed to be by Van den Hoecke until a few months ago, the reason being that Rubens' style kept being misunderstood up to now on.

Van Hoecke was the foremost follower of Rubens' style in Vienna and had worked in his studio in Antwerp in the 1630s before going to Rome shortly before 1640. He became Court Painter to the Archduke Leopold Wilhelm in Vienna and his early works showed a strong dependence on Rubens' late style but after his Italian sojourn, his work was more classicising, showing the strong influence of Guido Reni and Van Dyck whom he both copied much but his dry style and the attenuated figures to be seen in his works are far removed from “The Massacre of the Innocents” or the London “Samson and Delilah”.

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