Venus

Venus

Title

Venus

[National Gallery of Canada, revised 2017]

Painting on limewood

Medium

Painting on limewood

[National Gallery of Canada, revised 2017]

The pale, statuesque form of Venus, Roman goddess of love, stands out against the dark background. Her physical features, jewels, and diaphanous veil are characteristic of Cranach, as well as the signature - a small winged serpent at lower left. Cranach usually portrayed Venus accompanied by her child Cupid, but

The pale, statuesque form of Venus, Roman goddess of love, stands out against the dark background. Her physical features, jewels, and diaphanous veil are characteristic of Cranach, as well as the signature - a small winged serpent at lower left. Cranach usually portrayed Venus accompanied by her child Cupid, but here we see the radiant, sensual goddess by herself.

[National Gallery of Canada, revised 2017]

Attributions
Lucas Cranach the Elder
Hans Cranach

Attributions

Lucas Cranach the Elder

[National Gallery of Canada, revised 2017][Cat. Ottawa 1987, 86-87]
[Friedländer, Rosenberg 1979, No. 115]

Hans Cranach

[Schuchardt 1871, 88]

Production dates
about 1518
after 1518

Production dates

about 1518

[National Gallery of Canada, revised 2017][Cat. Ottawa 1987, 86-87][Exhib. Cat. Rotterdam 1938, No. 26]

after 1518

[Friedländer, Rosenberg 1932, 98d]

about 1528

[Exhib. Cat. Berlin 1937, No. 72]

Dimensions
Dimensions of support: 180.5 x 72.5 cm

Dimensions

  • Dimensions of support: 180.5 x 72.5 cm

  • [National Gallery of Canada, revised 2017]

Signature / Dating

Artist's insignia at the bottom left: winged serpent with elevated wings

Signature / Dating

  • Artist's insignia at the bottom left: winged serpent with elevated wings

Owner
Musée des beaux-arts du Canada/National Gallery of Canada, Ottawa
Repository
Musée des beaux-arts du Canada/National Gallery of Canada, Ottawa
Location
Ottawa
CDA ID
CA_MBAC_6087
FR (1978) Nr.
FR115
Persistent Link
https://lucascranach.org/en/CA_MBAC_6087/

Provenance

  • by 1870 in the collection of the von Zehmen family, Schloss Schleinitz, near Meissen, Germany [1]
  • by 1911 by descent to the Countess von Friesen-Schleinitz, Dresden and Schloss Schleinitz [2]
  • c. 1919 Countess von Friesen-Miltitz, Meissen, Allemagne, by inheritance [3]
  • by 1919 - 20.11.1924 Jacques Goudstikker (1897-1940), Amsterdam, purchased by Jacques Goudstikker [4]
  • 20.11.1924 - 06.1940 purchased by Ernst Paul Caesar Heinrich Proehl (1885-1973), Amsterdam [5]
  • 06.1940 - 05.1945 purchased by Reichsmarschall Hermann Wilhelm Göring (1893-1946), Germany, forced sale from Ernst Proehl for 75,000 fl [6]
  • 05.1945 - 20.10.1945 Munich Central Collecting Point of the U.S. Army's Monuments, Fine Arts and Archives section (MFA&A), Munich, Germany, recovered from Berchtesgaden, Germany [7]
  • 20.10.1945 - 05.02.1952 Stichting Nederlandsch Kunstbezit (SNK), The Hague, The Netherlands, restituted from Munich Central Collecting Point [8]
  • 05.02.1952 - 20.09.1952 Ernst Proehl, Amsterdam, restituted from the Dutch Bureau Herstelbetalings- en Recuperatiegoederen [9]
  • 20.09.1952 - 03.1953 E.J. Van Wisselingh & Co., Amsterdam, purchased from Ernst Proehl [10]
  • 03.1953 National Gallery, Ottawa, Canada, purchased from E.J. Van Wisselingh & Co. [11]

[1] Christian Schuchardt gives a detailed description of the painting when he writes in 1870 that he recently discovered the work in the collection of Mr. von Zehmen at Schleinitz castle, near Meissen. He attributes the work to Lucas Cranach the Younger [Schuchardt 1870, 88]. Schleinitz castle was owned by the von Zehmen family from 1773 until 1906, when it changed hands to the Von Friesen family.
[2] See note [1] and [3].
[3] In a 1919 catalogue, Dutch art-dealer Jacques Goudstikker lists "the Countess von Friesen-Hiltitz, a descendant of John the Mild of Saxony" as the first known owner of the painting ["Catalogus van de Collectie Goudstikker." Amsterdam 1919-20, no. 21]. He obviously misspelled the name of the von Friesen-Miltitz family, who resided at Siebeneichen castle near Meissen since c. 1550. At least two other paintings attributed to the Cranach school were in possession of the family from 1851 to 1935. Like the NGC's Venus, these were also part of Reichsmarschall Hermann Göring's collection between 1938 and 1945 [von zur Mühlen, Ilse. 'Die Kunstsammlung Hermann Görings.' Munich: Bayerische Staatsgemäldesammlungen, 2004, p. 121, 247, see also note [5].
[4] The painting is included in a 1919 catalogue of the Dutch art dealer Jacques Goudstikker [see note 1]. In a letter to the NGC, dated April 14, 1952, Peter Eilers of E.J. Van Wisselingh & Co., Amsterdam, notes that the painting was sold by Goudstikker on November 20, 1924 to a Jewish banker from Amsterdam. In a later letter to the NGC, dated September 23, 1952, Eilers indentifies the buyer as Ernst Proehl [NGC curatorial file].
[5] See note [3]. Ernst Proehl was a Dutch banker of German descent. In 1937, the Venus was exhibited in Berlin and in 1938 she was shown at the Museum Boymans in Rotterdam [Exhib. Cat. Berlin 1937, 66, No. 72; Exhib. Cat. Rotterdam 1938, No. 26]. Both exhibition catalogues refer to Proehl as owner of the painting. In a letter to the NGC's director H.O. McCurry, dated September 23, 1952, Peter Eilers writes: 'Mr. Proehl told me the following story, which will interest you. When the picture was exhibited at the Cranach exhibition in Berlin in 1937, Göring saw it. He asked Mr. Zimmermann, Director of the Kaiser-Friedrich-Museum and a friend of Proehl, to ask Mr. Proehl if he wanted to sell it. Proehl refused. Zimmermann repeated his request three times with no result. In 1939, The Netherlands' government made for their art-treasures shelters in the dunes and in one of these shelters it was stored away. When the Germans invaded Holland in 1940, they knew of course of these shelters. Now Göring got his chance and in June 1940 Proehl was forced to sell it to him.' [NGC curatorial file].
[6] In the OSS Art Looting Investigation Unit's Consolidated Interrogation Report of the Göring collection, we find a detailed description of the circumstances, how the Venus changed hands from Proehl to Goering: 'Hofer had been negotiating with Frau Proehl for the purchase of this picture for many months. He had not been able to come to an agreement, although Frau Proehl had promised that if ever she did sell the picture it would go to Göring. Finally Miedl, on hearing of the difficulty, said that he would obtain the picture at once by talking to Proehl as a businessman. He made good his promise. The picture was included in the first large Goudstikker deal. See below. Payment was made with securities and, according to Hofer, by letting in Proehl on some of Miedl's business deals. This is another case where Miedl was called in 'to talk as a business man' to a collector who was slow in selling a work of art. If the Renders case, (see below, Belgium) where there is definite evidence of pressure, is to be taken for comparison, then it may be that here also Miedl was called in to do the dirty work and apply pressure in some way or another' [Consolidated Interrogation Report No. 2 'The Goering Collection', September 1945, by the Office of Strategic Services (OSS) Art Looting Investigation Unit, p. 69, in: OSS art Looting Investigation Unit Reports 1945 - 46, National Archives and Records Administration, Washington D.C., USA, 2001, Microfilm (M1782)]. The report also notes that Alois Miedl and Walter Andreas Hofer, Göring's main art purchasers, bought the Venus for 75 000 Fl. Later that year, the painting was transported from Miedl's establishment in Amsterdam to Berlin together with 600 other paintings of the Goudstikker collection [Consolidated Interrogation Report No. 2 'The Goering Collection', September 1945, p. 71]. Along with a number of artworks by Cranach, Göring displayed the Venus at Carinhall, his country residence northeast of Berlin, where it was inventoried as RM [Reichsmarschall] no. 457. Shortly before Germany's capitulation in April 1945, it was evacuated from Carinhall with the rest of the collection and sent via Göring's castle Veldenstein to his alpine retreat in Berchtesgaden. The painting is included in a list titled 'Bilder aus Kurfürst nach Veldenstein' [paintings from Kurfürst to Veldenstein] as no. 132, Grosse Venus mit Schleier - von Proehl [Large Venus with veil - from Proehl], NARA, information kindly provided by Nancy Yeide, Head, Department of Curatorial Records, National Gallery of Art, Washington D.C., email, dated August 8, 2007, NGC curatorial file].
[7] The Venus reappears in May 1945 in two photographs, leaning against a wall, showing Walter Andreas Hofer - who was now working for the American Forces - sorting through stacks of old master paintings [photograph dated May 1945, Photographic Archive, Imperial War Museum, London, published in: 'High Art and National Socialism, Part I. The Linz Museum as Ideological Arena.' Monika Ginzkey Puloy in: 'Journal of the History of Collections.' vol. 8, no. 2, 1996, Oxford University Press, p. 207, and an undated photograph, kept in the National Archives, Washington, D.C., published in Haase, Gunther: 'Die Kunstsammlung des Reichsmarschalls Hermann Göring. Eine Dokumentation.' Berlin 2000, p. 168]. The confiscated Göring collection was stored and inventoried by members of the U.S. Army in Unterstein, near Berchtesgaden. The inventory list includes a Venus by Cranach from the Proehl collection, Amsterdam, and its dimensions correspond with those of the NGC's painting. [Howe, Thomas C. and Harry V. Anderson, 101st Airborne Army Division, APO 472, U.S. 'Inventory and receipt of Hermann Göring's art collection.' The Hermann Göring Art Museum, Unterstein, Berchtesgaden, Germany. August 4, 1945, copied in Haase, G., p. 270 - 306, p.274]. The painting was sent to the Munich Central Collecting Point on July 27, 1945, where it was inventoried as Mü. no. 5261 and restituted to the Netherlands on October 20, 1945 [Munich Central Collecting Point database, accessed on July 7, 2009, http://www.dhm.de/datenbank/ccp/dhm_ccp.php?seite=].
[8] The SNK, a Dutch organisation, assigned to recuperate artworks looted from the Netherlands during the World War II, kept a file on Ernst Proehl (SNK archive, no. 164), which contains correspondence between Proehl and the SNK. According to these documents, Ernst Proehl applied for the restitution of Cranach's Venus on October 15, 1945, declaring that the sale of the work to Hermann Göring was forced. The painting remained in care of the Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam, until 1951 and was then put on display at the Maurithshuis in The Hague [892; cat. 1952]. The restitution of the Venus to Proehl was approved by the Bureau Herstelbetalings- en Recuperatiegoerderen on February 5, 1952, [letter by J. Jolles to Ernst Proehl, NGC curatorial file]. Proehl had to pay f. 75.327,50 to the organisation, which was roughly the amount Göring paid in 1939 [bill dated October 1, 1952, addressed to Ernst Proehl by the Bureau Herstelbetalings- en Recuperatiegoerderen, NGC curatorial file. See also note [4].
[9] See note [8]. On September 1952, the painting was handed over by the Mauritshuis to Pieter Eilers of Van Wisselingh & Co., who was authorised by Ernst Proehl [letter by the Bureau Herstelbetalings- en Recuperatiegoerderen to s'Gravenhage, director of the Mauritshuis, dated September 20, 1952, NGC curatorial file].
[10] See note [9].
[11] The NGC purchased the painting in March 1953 from E.J. Van Wisselingh & Co. [Accession Log, NGC curatorial file].
[National Gallery of Canada, revised 2017]

See also the entry in the DHM-database: Datenblatt RMG00480; https://www.dhm.de/datenbank/goering/dhm_goering.php?seite=5&fld_0=RMG00480 (accessed 17 Dec. 2019).

Exhibitions

Dresden, Kunstgewerbemuseum 1911-1916; on loan
Amsterdam, Rijksmuseum 1929, no. 30
Berlin, Staatliche Museen 1937, no. 72
Rotterdam, Museum Boijmans 1938, no. 26
The Hague, Maurithuis 1951-1952, on loan
Toronto, Art Gallery of Ontario 1957, no. 41

Literature

Reference on page Catalogue Number Figure / Plate
Yeide 2009 A463
AuthorNancy H. Yeide
TitleBeyond the Dreams of Avarice. The Hermann Goering Collection
Place of PublicationDallas
Year of Publication2009
Mühlen 2004 121, 247
AuthorIlse von zur Mühlen
TitleDie Kunstsammlung Hermann Görings
Place of PublicationMunich
Year of Publication2004
Haase 2000 168
AuthorGunther Haase
TitleDie Kunstsammlung des Reichsmarschalls Hermann Göring. Eine Dokumentation.
Place of PublicationBerlin
Year of Publication2000
Puloy 1996 207
AuthorMonika Ginzkey Puloy
TitleHigh Art and National Socialism, Part I. The Linz Museum as Ideological Arena
JournalJournal of the History of Collections
Place of PublicationOxford
IssueVol. 8, No. 2
Year of Publication1996
Cat. Ottawa 1987 86-87
EditorM. Laskin, Jr., M. Pantazzi
TitleCatalogue of the National Gallery of Canada. European and American Painting, Sculpture, and Decorative Arts. Vol. 1: 1300-1800.
Place of PublicationOttawa
Year of Publication1987
Friedländer, Rosenberg 1979 115
AuthorMax J. Friedländer, Jakob Rosenberg
EditorG. Schwartz
TitleDie Gemälde von Lucas Cranach
Place of PublicationBasel, Boston, Stuttgart
Year of Publication1979
Cat. The Hague 1952 892
EditorMauritshuis, Den Haag
TitleAbridged Catalogue of the Pictures and Sculptures: Royal Picture Gallery Mauritshuis.
Place of PublicationThe Hague
Year of Publication1952
Exhib. Cat. Rotterdam 1938 26
Authorn. a.
TitleMeesterwerken uit vier Eeuwen. 1400 - 1800 [Rotterdam, Museum Boymans-Van Beuningen]
Place of PublicationRotterdam
Year of Publication1938
Exhib. Cat. Berlin 1937 31 072 Pl. 66
EditorStaatliche Museen, Berlin
TitleLucas Cranach d. Ä. und Lucas Cranach d. J. Gemälde, Zeichnungen, Graphik
Place of PublicationBerlin
Year of Publication1937
Friedländer, Rosenberg 1932 98d
AuthorMax J. Friedländer, Jakob Rosenberg
TitleDie Gemälde von Lucas Cranach
Place of PublicationBerlin
Year of Publication1932
Link http://digi.ub.uni-heidelberg.de/diglit/friedlaender1932
Exhib. Cat. Amsterdam 1929 30
AuthorD. C. Röell
TitleCatalogus van de tentoonstelling van oude kunst door de vereenigung van handelaren in oude kunst in Nederland [Amsterdam, Rijksmuseum]
Place of PublicationAmsterdam
Year of Publication1929
Cat. Amsterdam 1920 21
Authorn. a.
TitleCatalogus van de Collectie Goudstikker
Place of PublicationAmsterdam
Year of Publication1920
Cat. Amsterdam 1919 21
EditorJ. Goudstikker, Art dealer
TitleCatalogue de la collection Goudstikker [1919-1920]
Place of PublicationAmsterdam
Issue14
Year of Publication1919
Schuchardt 1871 88
AuthorChristian Schuchardt
TitleLucas Cranach des Aeltern Leben und Werke. Dritter Theil
Place of PublicationLeipzig
Year of Publication1871
Link http://digi.ub.uni-heidelberg.de/diglit/schuchardt1871bd3
  • Venus, about 1518

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Technical studies

1993Technical examination / Scientific analysis

  • Micro-sampling / cross-sections
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Conservation History

Date1993

  • overall
  • conservation

Technical Notes

Cleaned and restored in 1993, including the removal of a later 'modesty leaf.'

[National Gallery of Canada, revised 2017]

Citing from the Cranach Digital Archive

Entry with author
<author's name>, 'Venus', <title of document, data entry or image>. [<Date of document or image>], in: Cranach Digital Archive, https://lucascranach.org/en/CA_MBAC_6087/ (Accessed {{dateAccessed}})
Entry with no author
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