An art history mystery
In 2007, neurologist and 1955 alumnus Cornelis 鈥淜ees鈥 Van Nuis, donated 16 paintings to the permanent collection at 17c起草社区 College
In 2007, neurologist and 1955 alumnus Cornelis 鈥淜ees鈥 Van Nuis, donated 16 paintings to the permanent collection at 17c起草社区 College. Among them was Barn Interior, a pastoral scene of a woman and two children inside a barn by artist Egbert van der Poel.
Last summer, Joel Zwart, 17c起草社区鈥檚 director of exhibitions, sent Barn Interior to Chicago to be cleaned by Barry Bauman, an independent conservator. 鈥淲hat with chemicals and soot and dirt in the air, paintings naturally get darker,鈥 Zwart said, 鈥渁nd when they get cleaned, there鈥檚 a change in appearance.鈥
The flayed pig
When Bauman cleaned Barn Interior, however, the result was not only brightening; it was revelatory. The conservator noticed that a ladder on the painting鈥檚 left side had been heavily painted over and that the paint was flaking. And when he had cleaned a little more Bauman discovered a flayed pig鈥攁 butchered and stretched pig鈥攈anging upside down from the ladder.
"It was painted over, and the obvious question is, 鈥榃hy was it painted over?鈥欌 said Zwart. 鈥淲ell, it was most likely not covered over by the artist. Very likely a wealthy patron bought it. It鈥檚 this grotesque scene, this butchered animal hanging in a barn. And quite likely this patron hired another artist to paint it over to make it what the Dutch call 鈥榤ooi鈥 (lovely) or 鈥榞ezellig鈥 (cozy).鈥
The restoration gave the painting a proper focus. 鈥淭he composition looks a lot different than before, and it looks better,鈥 Zwart said, adding that the flayed pig gives a purpose for the ladder to be in such a prominent place in the painting. The restoration also helped explain a detail in the barn scene: 鈥淭he kid over here is blowing up the pig鈥檚 bladder to use as a toy,鈥 he pointed out.
The pendant
Bauman鈥檚 revelations about Barn Interior were not limited to the pig. The conservator also uncovered a signature and date, thus authenticating the artist of the painting.
Bauman鈥檚 research also uncovered a major part of the painting鈥檚 biography:
The painting is what is known as a 鈥減endant,鈥 one of a pair of paintings on a shared theme. Barn Interior's hangs in the Rijksmuseum in Amsterdam.
"This happens so rarely in conservation鈥攖hat you find something so interesting,鈥 Zwart said.
Bauman agreed: 鈥淐onservation is generally an invisible profession. Museum attendees are not aware of who performed the conservation work that surrounds them. This is the way it should be,鈥 he said. 鈥淚t is the object that is important; nevertheless, the conservator鈥檚 rewards are tangible and real. ... Discoveries of this nature are rare, but they carry an everlasting satisfaction that a little piece of the history of art is forever realized.鈥 Bauman has posted a case study on Barn Interior on his .
Honoring Van Nuis
17c起草社区 art history professor Henry Luttikhuizen is pleased that the discoveries about the painting put a spotlight on Van Nuis, who died February 7, 2008.
"Kees would have really enjoyed seeing the painting restored. I can readily imagine him chuckling with delight at the conservator's findings,鈥 Luttikhuizen said.
Barn Interior is a Dutch painting of the 17th century, placing its creation "right smack dab in the middle of the Dutch golden age,鈥 Zwart said. "This is probably one of the oldest paintings he gave us.鈥 It and the others paintings donated by Van Nuis, most of them 19th-century Dutch works, formed the basis of the fall 2007 exhibition 鈥淏etween Nature and Nationality: The Hague School in the 19th Century.鈥
Van Nuis donated his paintings to 17c起草社区 so that they could be enjoyed by a wider audience, Zwart said. The donation was one of two significant gifts of art to the college that provided impetus for building a new campus gallery. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 think Kees knew that we were going to have a new gallery in 2010 鈥 but I think he knew his gift would be a building block toward that,鈥 Zwart said.
He鈥檚 looking forward to seeing Barn Interior, in its new home. 鈥淚 can鈥檛 wait to hang this painting in the new gallery,鈥 Zwart said. 鈥淭his is a story that needs to be shared with people.鈥