17th century Flemish and Dutch paintings

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Pieter van Mase
A winter landscape with figures
Oil on panel : 45,1 X 54,6 cm
Signed bottom right
Turin, with Galleria Luigi Caretto, in 2004

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Painting for Sale
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Mase, Pieter van
"Birds in a park"
In short
 
Pieter van Mase was an incredibly versatile 2nd half 17th century painter from Rotterdam. Besides such a bird scenes he also painted Dutch summer or winter landscapes and beach scenes, Italianate harbour and market scenes, Rhine river views and fish still lifes.
Many of his paintings go hidden under attributions to better-known contemporary Dutch artists.
 
About Pieter van Mase
 
Dutch painter 
Circa 1650 – 1703/1723
 
Active in Rotterdam during the second half of the 17th century. He was last mentioned in 1703 (valuing an estate in The Hague).
Dated works known between 1671 and 1703.
 
His last name is sometimes spelt van Maas, Maasis, Maes or Maesis.
 
Although working at a time were painting got more and more specialised, with painters active in just one or maybe two different domains, van Mase seems to have been marvellously old fashioned. He did not restrain himself to just painting the same subject(s) for the rest of his life. Van Mase painted a very diverse range of subjects at a very descent level of quality. 
In a market where names can be more important than the sheer quality of painting it is not surprising that his paintings over the past years turned out to have been attributed to several well and better known contemporary painters.
He painted :
 
- Italianate and Levantine harbour scenes, related to Johannes Lingelbach (1622 – 1674), to Thomas Wijck (1616/24 – 1677), to Jan Baptist Weenix (1621 – 1663) and to Hendrick van Minderhout (1632 – 1696).
- Rhine river views, related to Herman Saftleven II (1609 – 1685).
- Italianate market scenes, related to Hendrick Mommers (circa 1623 – 1693).
- Dutch summer village feasts and winter views with ice skaters, reminding of Claes Molenaer and of Thomas Heeremans (1641 – 1697).
- Dutch beach scenes, reminding of Jan van Goyen (1596 – 1656) and of Claes Molenaer (before 1630 – 1676).
- Fish still lifes, like Abraham van Beyeren (1620/21 – 1690) and Isaac van Duynen (1628 – 1679/81).
- Birds and chickens in park landscapes, typical of Melchior de Hondecoeter (1636 – 1695).
 
Pieter van Mase was also active as staffage painter, including figures in paintings from colleagues. We know for example of two paintings by Jan Sonjé holding numerous figures by van Mase : one is in Ouwater, in the old catholic rectory, the other one we sold in 2006 (the pool of Bethesda).
Jan Gabrielsz. Sonjé was a Dutch landscape painter (Delft circa 1625 – 1707 Rotterdam?), a pupil of Adam Pynacker. Sonjé left Delft in 1654, probably after the huge explosion of its powder-magazine, for Rotterdam. 
In 1678, 1686 and 1692 he was Dean of the Guild of Saint Luke in Rotterdam. In 1668 he lived in Dordrecht.
 
Pieter’s brother, Gerrit, was also active as painter in Rotterdam.
Comparative paintings
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