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Dutch school from the end of the 18th century-early 19th century

Auction Lot 158 (40019479)
Dutch school of the late eighteenth-early nineteenth century.
"Young woman ironing with her dog".
Oil on panel.
Measurements: 31 x 25 cm, 50,5 x 46 cm (frame).

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Estimated Value : 800 - 1,000 €


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DESCRIPTION

Dutch school of the late eighteenth-early nineteenth century.
"Young woman ironing with her dog".
Oil on panel.
Measurements: 31 x 25 cm, 50.5 x 46 cm (frame).

The work shows a scene of domestic interior in which a woman performs a daily task, possibly ironing or working on a fabric, in a secluded and humble space. The figure appears concentrated on her work, leaning over a table, while a small dog, located on the right, directs her attention towards her, introducing an element of closeness and liveliness in the scene. The whole conveys a sense of intimacy and silence, focused on everyday life.

The composition is articulated as if it were a scene seen through an opening or niche, framed by a feigned architecture with a curtain above, a resource that generates depth and a theatrical effect. The light, warm and focused, illuminates the face and hands of the figure, creating a contrast with the dark background and accentuating the volume of the objects. The palette, dominated by ochers, browns and soft tones, reinforces the domestic atmosphere. The brushstroke is relatively smooth and controlled, with attention to detail in the elements of the furniture and fabrics.

This type of representation is linked to the tradition of Dutch genre painting, heir to the models of the seventeenth century, in which scenes of everyday life acquire an aesthetic and sometimes moral value. Artists such as Johannes Vermeer or Pieter de Hooch established this type of intimate compositions, centered on interiors and light as a structuring element.

The historical context in which this work is situated, probably between the late eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, responds to a time in which the models of the Dutch Golden Age are recovered and reinterpreted. In this context, domestic scenes continue to be appreciated by a bourgeois public, which finds in them an idealized image of everyday life, associated with values such as work, order and private life.

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