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MELCHIOR HONDECOETER

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Originally appearing in Volume V13, Page 649 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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MELCHIOR

HONDECOETER  D' (c . 1636-1695), Dutch painter, was born at Utrecht, it is said, about 1636, and died at Amsterdam on the 3rd of
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April 1695 . Old historians say that, being the grandson of Gillis and son of Gisbert d'Hondecoeter, as well as
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nephew of J . B . Weenix, he was brought up by the last two to the profession of
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painting . Of Weenix we know that he married one Josina d'Hondecoeter in 1638 . Melchior was, therefore, related to Weenix, who certainly influenced his style . As to Gillis and Gisbert some points still remain obscure, and it is difficult to accept the statement that they stood towards each other in the relation of
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father and son, since both were registered as painters at Utrecht in 1637 . Both it appears had practised
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art before coming to Utrecht, but where they resided or what they painted is uncertain . Unhappily pictures scarcely help us to clear up the mystery . In the Ftirstenberg collection at Donaueschingen there is a "Concert of Birds" dated 162o, and signed with the monogram G . D .

H.; and we may presume that G . D . H. is the

man whose "
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Hen and Chickens in a Landscape " in the gallery of
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Rotterdam is inscribed " G . D . Hondecoeter, 1652 "; but is the first letter of the monogram to stand for Gillis or Gisbert ? In the museums of
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Dresden and Cassel landscapes with sportsmen are catalogued under the name of Gabriel de Heusch (?), one of them dated 1529, and certified with the monogram G . D . H., challenging attention by resemblance to a
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canvas of the same class inscribed G . D . Hond. in the Berlin Museum . The question here is also whether G. means Gillis or Gisbert . Obviously there are two artists to consider. one of whom paints birds, the other landscapes and sportsmen .

Perhaps the first is Gisbert, whose son Melchior also

chose birds as his
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peculiar subject . Weenix too would naturally teach his nephew to study the feathered tribe . Melchior, however, began his career with a different speciality from that by which he is usually known . Mr de Stuers affirms that he produced sea-pieces . One of his earliest
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works is a " Tub with Fish," dated 1655, in the gallery of Brunswick . But Melchior soon abandoned fish or fowl . He acquired celebrity as a painter of birds only, which he represented not exclusively, like Fyt, as the gamekeeper's perquisite after a day's
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shooting, or stock of a poulterer's
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shop, but as living beings with passions, joys, fears and quarrels, to which naturalists will tell us that birds are subject . Without the brilliant tone and high finish of Fyt, his Dutch
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rival's birds are full of
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action; and, as Burger truly says, Hondecoeter displays the maternity of the hen with as much tenderness and feeling as Raphael the maternity of Madonnas . But Fyt was at home in depicting the coat of deer and dons as well as plumage . Hondecoeter cultivates anarrower field, and seldom goes beyond a cock-fight or a display of mere
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bird
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life . Very few of his pictures are dated, though more are signed . Amongst the former we should note the "
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Jackdaw deprived of his Borrowed Plumes " (1671), at the Hague, of which
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Earl Cadogan has a variety; or "
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Game and Poultry " and " A Spaniel hunting a Partridge " (1672), in the gallery of Brussels; or " A Park with Poultry " (1686) at the Hermitage of St
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Petersburg .

Hondecoeter, in

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great favour with the magnates of the
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Netherlands, became a member of the painters' academy at the Hague in 1659 . William III. employed him to paint his
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menagerie at Loo, and the picture, now at the Hague museum, shows that he could at a pinch overcome the difficulty of representing India's cattle, elephants and gazelles . But he is better in homelier works, with which he adorned the royal chateaux of Bensberg and Oranienstein at different periods of his life (Hague and Amsterdam) . In 1688 Hondecoeter took the freedom of the city of Amsterdam, where he resided till his
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death . His earliest works are more conscientious, lighter and more transparent than his later ones . At all times he is bold of touch and sure of eye, giving the motion of birds with great spirit and accuracy . His masterpieces are at the Hague and at kmsterdam . But there are
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fine examples in private collections in England, and in the public galleries of Berlin,
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Caen, Carlsruhe, Cassel, Cologne, Copenhagen, Dresden,
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Dublin, Florence,
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Glasgow, Hanover,
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London, Lyons,
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Montpellier, Munich, Paris, Rotterdam,
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Rouen, St Petersburg,
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Stuttgart and Vienna .

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