Edward William Cooke (1811-1880)
Provenance
Thomas Garbe;
His sale, Christie's London, 24 May 1962, lot 32, sold to Mrs A.D. Smith for 45 gns;
Mrs. A.D.Cowan;
Agnews, London;
Sale, Christie's London, 25 January 1974, lot 116;
with J.S. Maas & Son, London;
Sir David Scott, purchased from the above, 1975;
Sale, 'A Great British Collection: The pictures collected by Sir David and Lady Scott', Sotheby's London, 19 November 2008, lot 18, sold for £31,250;
The Estate of Miss Elizabeth Creak, sold to benefit the Elizabeth Creak Charitable Trust
Exhibitions
Edinburgh, National Gallery of Scotland, Sunshine and Shadow: the David Scott Collection, 1991, no.3.
Literature
John Munday, E.W.Cooke 1811-1880, A Man of his Time, Woodbridge, 1996, cat. no. 38/4, page 329, illustrated in colour, plate 163, page 249.
At the British Institution in 1839, Cooke exhibited several paintings from a trip to the Netherlands the year before of the windmill atop the city wall of Leiden that was once said to have been owned by Rembrandt’s family, the van Rhijns. Although Cooke was misinformed, and this mill (now long since gone) was not the actual Rembrandt mill, the painting is a peephole into an early Victorian understanding of Rembrandt’s life and technique, then highly influential on British painters. Cooke here used umbrous tones and strongly directional lighting, but retained his own wet, oily palette and polished finish.
'Cooke had a taste for depicting accurate technical details, and his Mill is at once a carefully observed record of the gearing and machinery of an old mill, and a tribute to a great artist. Employing the idiom of the picturesque in the decaying brickwork scarred wood and deeply worn tread above the ladder, Cooke stresses the passage of time and continuity of human usage. Light comes on the scene through a single small window, and is diffused over the objects inside, in a way which Cooke might have learned from studying Rembrandt's prints.'
(Sunshine and Shadow, catalogue to the exhibition, National Gallery of Scotland, 1991).
The Maas Gallery, 6 Duke Street, St. James's, London, SW1Y 6BN
+44 (0) 20 7930 9511 | mail@maasgallery.com
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