Skip to main content

Landscape with Goats

(Dutch, 1622–1673)
about 1660
Medium/TechniqueOil on canvas
Dimensions96.9 x 84.5 cm (38 1/8 x 33 1/4 in.)
Credit LineBequest of Mrs. Jasper Whiting
Accession number65.615
On View
Not on view
ClassificationsPaintings
Collections
Description
Although Pijnacker’s paintings exhibit the characteristics of Dutch Italianate landscapes, there are no known documents that confirm he ever visited in Italy. Instead, he may have developed his luminous compositions infused with a golden-colored light from the works of artists like Jan Both. Though undated, this painting was assuredly executed around 1660, about the time the artist moved from Schiedam to Amsterdam. Pijnacker’s paintings of this period were executed on a larger scale than his earlier works and—as is evident in this painting—often feature giant cabbage leaves in the foreground, distant mountain views, and prominently-placed birch trees.
InscriptionsLower center: APynacker (A and P Joined)
ProvenancePossibly Pierre Louis Paul Randon de Boisset (b. 1708 - d. 1776), Paris; February 3, 1777, possibly posthumous Randon de Boisset sale, Pierre Remy, Paris, lot 103 [see note 1]. 1809, possibly Pierre Grand-Pré, Paris; February 16-24, 1809, possibly Grand-Pré sale, Paris, lot 95a, to Alexandre-Joseph Paillet (b. 1743 - d. 1814), Paris. With James McClure and Son, Glasgow [see note 2]. Thos. Agnew and Sons, London [see note 3]. By 1949, Marion Schlesinger (Mrs. Jasper) Whiting (b. 1880 - d. 1965), Boston; 1965, bequest of Mrs. Jasper Whiting to the MFA. (Accession Date: May 20, 1965)

NOTES:
[1] On the early provenance of the painting, see Laurie B. Harwood, "Adam Pynacker (c. 1620 - 1673)" (Doornspijk, 1988), pp. 111-112, cat. no. B4. [2] A label on the reverse of the painting, now partially obliterated, reads "James McClure & Son / ...to her majesty / carvers, gilders, printsellers / 90, St. Vincent Street, Glasgow." James McClure is known to have been active in the second half of the nineteenth century. [3] On the reverse of the stretcher is a label from Agnew and the remains of an old, English language label that is largely illegible.
Mediterranean Harbor
Adam Pijnacker
about 1650
Clouds (Landscape near Cornish)
Charles Adams Platt
about 1894
The Colgate Family
Johannes Adam Simon Oertel
1866
Formation III (Green Landscape)
Arthur Garfield Dove
about 1942
Portrait of Harvey S. Firestone, Jr.
Elizabeth Shoumatoff
1957
Orpheus Charming the Animals
Aelbert Cuyp
about 1640
Landscape with a Mill
Eugène Deshayes
1860
Restricted
Unidentified artist, Belgian, fourth quarter 18th century
Portrait of an Artist
Hyacinthe François Rigau y Ros, called Hyacinthe Rigaud
after 1711
Vision of Ezekiel
Raphael (Raffaello Sanzio or Santi)