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Notes
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Dutch whaling in the Arctic had started in the early seventeenth century, driven by the economic aims of the Noordsche Compagnie, or North Company, part of the Dutch fleet. Dutch whalers were sailing up the coast of Greenland and Norway where they found themselves competing with the British. Dutch whaling reached its peak between 1680 and 1725. It is, therefore, not surprising that the pictorial adaptation of this industry in Dutch art, which itself depended on artists’ specialization, also saw an increase during the last quarter of the seventeenth century. The artist of this pen-painting on panel, whose signature might be read as T. or F. Boon, transferred both the technique of grisaille and the artistic motif of the whalers in Northern seas into the early eighteenth century.
Title
A Seventeenth-Century Whaling Scene
Date
1724
Medium
oil & grisaille on panel
Measurements
H 48.3 x W 82.6 cm
Accession number
BHC0977
Work type
Painting
Inscription description
T/F Boon 1724