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Get Paintings Reproductions Peacock and Hunting Trophies, 1708 by Jan Weenix (1641-1719, Netherlands) | ArtsDot.com

Peacock and Hunting Trophies

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This large composition, in the style of late seventeenth-century decorative paintings, depicts various hunting trophies and a peacock framed by a landscape background. The inanimate position of the swan conforms to a widely used model for works of this type, and was frequent in compositions by artists such as Frans Snyders (1579-1657). In the background stands a large urn decorated with bas-reliefs. The work dates from a period, when the artist was working on a series of twelve compositions on hunting motifs commissioned by the Palatine Elector Johann Wilhem for the Castle of Bensberg (1712 to 1714).The painting is similar to various other works that the artist executed in the same spirit and which were intended to illustrate the favourite pastime of the elites, such as \
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Jan Weenix

Maria Weenix (1697–1774), was an 18th-century painter from the Northern Netherlands.
According to the RKD she was the daughter of Jan Weenix, who taught her to paint. She is known in the literature as "Juffrouw Weeniks" and was admired in her own time for flower still lifes. She accompanied her father to the court of Johann Wilhelm, Elector Palatine where she came into contact with the works of the flower painters Rachel Ruysch, Adriana Spilberg, and Jacoba Maria van Nickelen.She died in Amsterdam.

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