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2 articles
Article
Anthonie Palamedes’s paintings for the Delft Surgeons’ Guildhall
02/2021 | 1415 | 163
Pages: 119-127
related names
Author:
Rosen, Jochai (Rosen, Jochai)
Subjects
dates:
places:
subjects:
Illustrations
Attributed works:
1. Portrait of a group of surgeons supervising the amputation of a leg, by Anthonie Palamedes. c.1658. Oil on panel, 95 by 65 cm. (Photograph RKD, Netherlands Institute for Art History, The Hague).
Attributed works:
10. Title page of J. Veslingius: Konstige ontleding des menschelijken lichaems, Amsterdam 1661. (National Museum Boerhaave, Leiden).
Attributed works:
11. Deceased conjoined twins, by Anthonie Palamedes. 1669. Oil on canvas. (Anatomical Museum, Leiden University Medical Center).
Attributed works:
12. Two dead foetuses, by Anthonie Palamedes. 1658. Oil on canvas. (Anatomical Museum, Leiden University Medical Center).
Attributed works:
13. Deathbed portrait of conjoined twins, by Evert van der Maes. c.1628. Oil on canvas, 54 by 65.5 cm. (Haags Historisch Museum, The Hague).
Attributed works:
2. Portrait of a group of surgeons supervising a trepanation, by Anthonie Palamedes. c.1658. Oil on panel, 95 by 65 cm. (Photograph RKD, Netherlands Institute for Art History, The Hague).
Attributed works:
3. Detail of Caring for the sick, by Domenico di Bartolo, showing a man being washed before an operation. 1440. Fresco, height approx. 450 cm. (Pellegrinaio, Spedale di S. Maria della Scala, Siena; Bridgeman Images).
Attributed works:
4. Frontispiece of Franciscus Arcaeus: De recta curandorum vulnerum atque febrium ratione tractatus brevis & succinctus, Amsterdam 1658. (Leiden University, Special Collections).
Attributed works:
5. Serratura, by Hans Wechtlin, from H. von Gersdorf: Feldbuch der Wundartznei, Strasbourg 1528. Woodcut, 30 by 20 cm.
Attributed works:
6. Amputation scene. After a design for the frontispiece of P. Barbette: Opera chirurgico-anatomica, ad circularem sanguinis motum, aliaque recentiorum inventa, accommodata, Leiden 1672.
Attributed works:
7. Amputation scene, from W. Hildanus: De Gangraena et Sphacelo, Tractatus Methodicus, 1617.
Attributed works:
8. Acts of medicine and surgery including the amputation of a leg below the knee, by Jost Amman. c.1565. Woodcut. (National Library of Medicine, Bethesda MD).
Attributed works:
9. The physician as God, from a series of four engravings, Allegories of the medical profession, by the workshop of Hendrick Goltzius. c.1587. Engraving, 17.8 by 22.8 cm. (Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam).
Article
Codde not Brekelenkam: a case of mistaken identity
02/2018 | 1379 | 160
Pages: 112-117
related names
Author:
Rosen, Jochai (Rosen, Jochai)
Subjects
dates:
media:
places:
Illustrations
Attributed works:
1. Portraits of Cornelis Visscher, Jan de Visscher, Richard Brakenburg and Quiringh Gerritsz, van Brekelenkam, by Jacob Ernst Marcus. 1815. Etching, 23.1 by 14.4 cm. (Rijksprentenkabinet, Amsterdam).
Attributed works:
2. Portrait of an artist (here identified as Pieter Codde), by Cornelis van Noorde. 1752. Pen and black ink with grey wash on paper, 23.6 by 21 cm. (Private collection, photograph Bob Haboldt & Co., New York).
Attributed works:
3. Portrait of an Artist, by Taco Hajo Jelgersma. c.1752. Watercolour, 18 by 15.5 cm. (Noord-Hollands Archief, Haarlem).
Attributed works:
4. Self-portrait in the studio with Taco Hajo Jelgersma, by Cornelis van Noorde. 1752. Watercolour, 31 by 39 cm. (Private collection).
Attributed works:
5. Portrait of Willem van Mieris and Frans van Mieris II, by Frans van Meiris II. 1742. Panel, 34 by 30.4 cm. (Stedelijk Museum De Lakenhal, Leiden).
Attributed works:
6. Portraits of Frans van Mieris I and Jan Steen, by Jacob Houbraken after Frans van Mieris I. 1753. Engraving, 14.5 by 9.3 cm. (Rijksprentenkabinet, Amsterdam).
Attributed works:
7. Self-portrait in the studio, by Pieter Codde. c.1628. Panel, 41 by 54 cm. (Present location unknown, photograph D. Heinemann, Munich, 1929).
Attributed works:
8. A conversation about art, by Pieter Codde. c.1630–33. Panel, 43.2 by 57.3 cm. (Fondation Custodia, Paris).
Attributed works:
9. Guardroom scene, by Pieter Codde. 1628. Panel, 41 by 54 cm. (Wawel Castle, Cracow).