Catalogue entry no. 52 by William W. Robinson:
No landscape paintings by Nicolaes Maes are known today, but he evidently produced at least one. An inventory compiled in 1663 of the contents of a house in Delft lists “een landschap van Maes van Dordrecht.” All that remains of his achievement as a landscapist is a small group of drawings. None of them are signed, and their attribution rests on their resemblance to a small sketch on the recto of a sheet that, on its verso, bears a study for Maes’s painting Christ Blessing the Children. The painting probably dates from circa 1652–53, near the end of the artist’s training in Rembrandt’s workshop. Since the Harvard sheet and the closely related View of the Vriesepoort, Dordrecht (Fig. 1) represent scenery on the outskirts of Dordrecht, it is likely that they should be dated after he returned to his native city in 1653.
In the composition and technique of this drawing, Maes emulated works by Rembrandt from around 1650, such as Landscape with the House with the Little Tower (Fig. 2). He followed Rembrandt’s model by sketchily articulating the foreground field with long, horizontal strokes and extensive reserves, while the trees, mills, and other buildings that constitute the main motif are executed in greater detail. The lines that crisscross the field in Maes’s work, some lightly smudged or accentuated by a sawtooth pattern, imitate the delicate strokes that evoke the expanse of the river and watery meadow in Rembrandt’s drawing.
Maes sketched the view in the Harvard work from the polder south of the city. Drained in the early seventeenth century, the fields in this area—some used for bleaching cloth (see Fig. 1)—were planted with trees and gardens and dotted with mills. The summarily outlined features of Dordrecht’s distant skyline include, at the left, the Grote Kerk (Great Church), the city’s most prominent landmark, and just left of center, the cupola of the Stadhuis (Town Hall).
The hand that wrote Dordregt at the bottom of the Harvard sheet also annotated the view of bleaching fields outside the Vriesepoort and at least three other drawings. The ink used for the Harvard drawing and the ink of its inscription are either identical or were concocted contemporaneously from the same, or a very similar, recipe. It is therefore very likely that these annotations were written by the artist himself. Four of the inscribed drawings—the Harvard work, View of the Vriesepoort, Dordrecht, and two studies depicting the Belvedere in Nijmegen can be attributed with confidence to Maes because their technique resembles that of the sketch on the recto of his study for Christ Blessing the Children. Another inscribed drawing represents a purely architectural motif, the tower of the Westerkerk in Amsterdam. Although the ink-and-wash technique of this last-mentioned study differs from that of the landscapes, it does recall the handling of other drawings by the artist and may plausibly be attributed to him. Three or four additional landscapes, which do not bear inscriptions, are also attributable to Maes.
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