17th century Flemish and Dutch paintings

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Attributed to Gillis I and Bonaventura I Peeters
The capture of Gravelines, July 1644
Oil on canvas : 100 X 127,5 cm
Unsigned
Sold at Sotheby’s London, 12/07/01
For 29.250 £ = 48.725 € 

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Painting for Sale
In short
 
Our Gillis Peeters was the eldest brother of two famous marine painters, Bonaventura I and Jan I Peeters. Although they were Flemish painters they must often have worked for Dutch patrons: Dutch ships regularly appear in his brother’s maritime subjects and Gillis travelled around 1637 to the Dutch colonies in S. America, where he made topographical landscapes.
 
Gillis painted local Flemish landscapes, such as our painting, but also mountainous Alpine views and Nordic sceneries.
 
About Gillis Peeters I
 
Sometimes called Egidius Peeters I
 
Flemish painter
Antwerp 1612 – 1653 Antwerp
 
Landscape, genre and marine painter and engraver.
Pupil of Anthony Claesz. II.
 
Gillis was the eldest of three famous brothers; Bonaventura I and Jan I, who were both best known as marine painters. Their sister Catharina was a still life painter.
 
Gillis Peeters became, together with his brother Bonaventura, Master in the Painter’s Guild of Saint Luke in Antwerp in the year 1634/35. Both brothers shared a studio in Antwerp.
Around 1637 Gillis must have travelled to the Dutch colonies, such as Brazil and Guyana, where he made topographical landscapes.
 
His early landscapes show a Mannerist touch, including mountainous Alpine landscapes related to the Flemish painter Jan Tilens. 
From the middle of the 1640s he worked under the influence of the Dutch painter Allaert van Everdingen. Everdingen (1621 – 1675) travelled to Norway and Sweden in 1644-45; this stay influenced him in his choice of subjects, Nordic mountains, woods and waterfalls. 
Landscape painters have always been looking for something ‘new’, besides their own Flemish or Dutch views: strange rock formations in the Ardennes, Rhine river views, sunny Italian landscapes, mountainous Alpine and Nordic views. 
 
Our painter was the father of Bonaventura II, Willem and Gillis II, all of them painters.
- Bonaventura II was a pupil of his uncle, Bonaventura I: his landscapes are influenced by his father, his seascapes by his uncle.
- Of Willem nothing is known.
- And of Gillis II there is only one dated painting, a landscape, known. He died in a convent in present-day Indonesia, then a Dutch colony, at the age of 33.
 
Why should you buy this painting?
 
Because it is a fully signed, warm, Flemish summer view.
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