ID 1208135
Lot 1149 | Albert Flamm. At the Tomb of Caecilia Metella near Rom
Valeur estimée
€ 4 000 – 8 000
Title: At the Tomb of Caecilia Metella near Rom.
Technique: Oil on canvas.
Mounting: Relined.
Measurement: 61 x 48,5cm.
Notation: Signed at the bottom: "A. Flamm".
Frame: Framed.
Provenance:
Private ownership, Germany.
Like his close friend and brother-in-law Oswald Achenbach, Albert Flamm, one of the leading landscape painters of the later Düsseldorf school of painting, specialised in Italian motifs. His views of Rome, the Campagna, Naples and southern Italy, often enlivened with folkloristic staffage, are still very popular today.
Last year we were able to celebrate the 200th birthday of the Cologne-born artist and so it is a retroactive tribute that this catalogue is enriched by five works by Flamm.
Albert Flamm initially studied architecture at the Düsseldorf Academy of Art, but turned to painting in 1841 and became a pupil of Andreas Achenbach. He quickly became close friends with Achenbach's brother Oswald, who was four years younger than Flamm himself. In 1845, they undertook their first joint study trip to northern Italy. The second trip to Italy, which the friends set off on in 1850, was probably decisive for Flamm. While Oswald Achenbach returned to Düsseldorf after four months, Albert Flamm, who had found his artistic home, stayed in Rome for over three years and also travelled to Naples and Sicily from there. But he, too, eventually returned to Düsseldorf, although he continued to make the gruelling journey south over the following decades. Flamm was deeply rooted in Düsseldorf, he was a founding member of the artists' association "Malkasten" in 1848, he was socially established and married the sister of Oswald Achenbach's wife in 1860. From 1870, Flamm also represented his brother-in-law as a teacher at the academy for a time.
Albert Flamm, like Oswald Achenbach, had captured the spirit of the times with his Italian motifs. In the course of the 19th century, the advancing emancipation and economic and social rise of the bourgeoisie was accompanied by the pursuit of classical education and the desire for (its) representation. Anyone who thought highly of themselves wanted to get to know the country that had been the main destination of the aristocracy's "grand tour" through Europe since the Renaissance. For the majority of citizens, however, Italy as a destination of longing was physically (almost) unreachable. Travelling to the south was long, expensive and certainly uncomfortable.
The travel impressions brought back from Italy by Albert Flamm therefore sold extremely well on the young, newly organised market with an increasingly institutionalised exhibition system in northern Europe, but also in the USA.
The bourgeois salons were given a "window to the south" with views of Rome and its environs, Naples and Venice. The artist's choice of motifs is comparable to today's Instagram selection: Tourist highlights and architectural icons were just as worthy of depiction as picturesque scenes from everyday life.
Flamm's great skill lay in the painterly rendering of the mood of the light and the colouring.
Two of the paintings represented here, the sweeping view of the Campagna di Roma (lot 1147) and the Via Appia with the Torre di Cecilia Metella (lot 1149), show the landscapes so typical of Flamm in the warm light of the setting sun.The streets draw the viewer's gaze into the paintings, in which the women standing at the fountain or the people with folkloristic details, who appear small next to the ancient landmark, liven up the tranquil landscapes.These signed but undated paintings demonstrate Flamm's masterful use of his painterly skills.
Two other of Albert Flamm's paintings presented here depict rural life in front of farmsteads in glistening sunshine. Haze and dust are in the air and turn lot 1148 into a fantastic late Impressionist, hot breath of colour. Despite the fast and confident brushwork, the artist lovingly renders fine details, such as the clergyman looking at the scenery in the open door.
Lot 1146 is comparable to the aforementioned painting in terms of the lighting mood and motif, the unloading of a hay cart. Once again, the composition draws the viewer's gaze into the depths, but the shimmering sea in the background (the Gulf of Naples?) absorbs the dynamic and lends the work a stronger sense of calm. The brightness of the scene can be seen from the pleasant shadows.
The view of the Faraglioni rocks off the coast of Capri (lot 1150), attributed to Albert Flamm, conveys a sublime calm. From an elevated position on the shore, the viewer's gaze falls down onto the rocks, which stand there in majestic grandeur. It is a rarely observed moment of calm; the sea surface is completely still and reflects the cliffs in total clarity. But this vast seascape is also alive with people. Two small female figures can be seen on the coastal slope. They emphasise the size and vastness of what we see. These five paintings by Albert Flamm give a comprehensive impression of the versatility of Italian impressions, which timelessly fulfill the longing for the south.
Artiste: | Albert Flamm (1823 - 1906) |
---|---|
Technique appliquée: | Huile |
Catégorie maison de vente aux enchères: | Peinture 19ème siècle |
Artiste: | Albert Flamm (1823 - 1906) |
---|---|
Technique appliquée: | Huile |
Catégorie maison de vente aux enchères: | Peinture 19ème siècle |
Adresse de l'enchère |
VAN HAM Kunstauktionen GmbH Hitzelerstr. 2 50968 Köln Allemagne | ||||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Aperçu | |||||||||||||||
Téléphone | +49 221 92586215 | ||||||||||||||
Fax | +49 221 92 58 62 4 | ||||||||||||||
Commission | 29% | ||||||||||||||
Conditions d'utilisation | Conditions d'utilisation | ||||||||||||||
Heures d'ouverture | Heures d'ouverture
|
Plus du Créateur
Termes connexes
Questions fréquemment posées
Pour participer aux ventes aux enchères, vous devez d’abord, vous inscrire. Après la confirmation de l’adresse e-mail, complétez votre profil d’utilisateur en fournissant des renseignements personnels tels que votre prénom, nom de famille et l’adresse postale. Choisissez un lot qui vous intéresse et indiquez le montant maximum que vous voulez offir pour ce lot. Dès que vous confirmez votre choix, nous transférerons votre demande par voie électronique à la maison de ventes aux enchères appropriée. Si votre demande est acceptée, votre offre va participer aux ventes aux enchères. Vous pouvez vérifier le statut actuel de votre offre en tout temps dans votre cabinet personnel VIL sous l’onglet «Vos offres».
Les enchères sont réalisées par les maisons de ventes et chacune des maisons de ventes décrit ses conditions de vente. Vous pouvez voir les textes dans la rubrique «Information sur les ventes».
Les résultats des ventes aux enchères sont publiés dans quelques jours après la clôture de l’enchère. En haut de la page du site web VIL, vous trouverez l’onglet «Enchères». Cliquez sur cet onglet et naviguez vers la page des catalogues de ventes aux enchères où vous trouverez facilement l’onglet « Résultats des ventes ». Sur cet onglet, sélectionnez l’enchère qui vous intéresse et consultez l’état de vente du lot de votre choix.
Les informations sur les gagnants des enchères sont confidentielles. Le gagnant de l'enchère recevra une notification directe de la maison d'enchères responsable avec des instructions pour les mesures à prendre: une facture de paiement et la manière dont les marchandises ont été reçues.
Chacune de maisons de ventes aux enchères adhère à sa propre politique concernant les modes de paiement des lots remportés. Toutes les maisons de ventes aux enchères acceptent les virements bancaires; la plupart d’elles acceptent les paiements par carte de crédit. Dans un avenir très proche, vous trouverez des renseignements détaillés sous la rubrique «Information sur les ventes», à la page du catalogue et du lot.
Le mode de livraison du lot dépend de sa taille et ses dimensions. Les petits articles peuvent être livrés par la poste. Les objets plus grands sont expédiés par courrier. Les préposés à la livraison des maisons de ventes aux enchères vous proposeront différentes options selon votre cas.
Non. Les archives servent de référence pour l'étude des prix des enchères, des photographies et des descriptions d'œuvres d'art.