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Thomas van der Wilt

Auction Lot 32 (40023207)
THOMAS VAN DER WILT (1659-1733).
"Portrait of a Lady," c. 1706.
Oil on canvas. Relined.
Signed and dated.
Measurements: 55 x 46 cm; 79 x 70 cm (frame).

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Estimated Value : 6,000 - 7,000 €


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DESCRIPTION

THOMAS VAN DER WILT (1659-1733).
"Portrait of a Lady," c. 1706.
Oil on canvas. Relined.
Signed and dated.
Measurements: 55 x 46 cm; 79 x 70 cm (frame).
Thomas van der Wilt was one of the most appreciated painters in the bourgeois environment of Delft at the beginning of the 18th century. The work clearly reveals his belonging to the fijnschilder tradition, characterized by meticulous execution, extreme attention to detail and a polished finish that seeks the illusion of reality without renouncing formal elegance.
The female figure is depicted with sober dignity, seated in a carefully articulated interior, where the architectural background and the barely hinted landscape function as a framework of social prestige rather than as a narrative setting. Van der Wilt displays here a technique of remarkable precision: the textures of the fabrics, the bluish satin of the dress, the golden shawl and the lace sleeves, are described with an almost tactile subtlety, through soft transitions of light and color that show an absolute mastery of oil painting. The modeling of the face, delicate and restrained, avoids expressive emphasis to focus on a measured idealization, in keeping with the values of decorum and self-control typical of the Dutch bourgeoisie.
The theme of the female portrait, central to Dutch painting of the period, acquires special relevance in this work as a manifestation of status and virtue. The lady is not presented through explicit symbolic attributes, but through her composure, her serene gaze and the quality of her clothing, elements that reinforce an image of respectability and moral balance. This psychological restraint, heir to the Delft portrait tradition and linked to the teaching of Jan Verkolje, places Van der Wilt in a continuist line with respect to sober Dutch classicism, far from both exuberant baroque and more narrative domestic intimacy.
From the stylistic point of view, the work confirms Van der Wilt's artistic personality as a portraitist specializing in the urban elite, capable of combining descriptive fidelity and aesthetic refinement. The painting thus stands as a significant testimony to the visual culture of Delft around 1700 and to the survival of the fijnschilder ideal, in which technical excellence is placed at the service of a restrained, elegant and lastingly convincing image.

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