Samson Mocked
Painting by Jan Steen
Samson Mocked or The Mockery of Samson is an oil-on-canvas painting by Jan Steen, created c. 1670, now in the Museum of Fine Arts, Antwerp.[1]
It appeared in an 18th-century auction catalogue described as "a painting of Samson bound by the Philistines, by Jan Steen, very good and with rare ideas". From the 1940s until 2018 it was thought to be an 18th-century copy by Ignatius de Roore of a work by Steen.[2][1][3] It was investigated and restored at the Mauritshuis in The Hague in 2018 and reattributed back to Steen.[2]
References
- ^ a b (in Dutch) Schilderij van Jan Steen ontdekt in Belgisch depot, NOS.nl, 9 February 2018
- ^ a b Museum voor Schone Kunsten Antwerpen is een topstuk rijker, VRT NWS, 9 February 2018
- ^ Stefan Kuiper, De Jan Steen die geen Jan Steen was, is dus wél een Jan Steen, de Volkskrant, 12 February 2018
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Jan Steen
- A Mayor of Delft and his Daughter (1655)
- The Drunken Couple (c. 1655–1665)
- Interior with an Old Woman and a Young Boy (c. 1656–1660)
- The Oyster Eater (c. 1658–1660)
- The Lovesick Maiden (c. 1660)
- Tobias and Sarah in Prayer with the Angel Raphael and the Demon (c. 1660)
- The Physician's Visit (1660–1662)
- Skittle Players outside an Inn (c. 1660–1663)
- Children Teaching a Cat to Dance (c. 1660–1679)
- The Twelfth Night Feast (1662)
- Beware of Luxury (1663)
- The Dancing Couple (1663)
- Woman at her Toilet (1663)
- Wine is a Mocker (1663–64)
- The Effects of Intemperance (c. 1663–1665)
- The Feast of Saint Nicholas (c. 1665–1668)
- The Bean Feast (c. 1668)
- The Happy Family (1668)
- "As the Old Sing, So Pipe the Young" (1668–1670)
- Samson Mocked (c. 1670)
- SS Jan Steen
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