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Auction archive: Lot number 152

Johan van Hell (1889-1952)

Estimate
€40,000 - €60,000
ca. US$41,293 - US$61,940
Price realised:
n. a.
Auction archive: Lot number 152

Johan van Hell (1889-1952)

Estimate
€40,000 - €60,000
ca. US$41,293 - US$61,940
Price realised:
n. a.
Beschreibung:

'De maaier' signed and dated 'Johan van Hell./1921' (lower left) oil on canvas, 150x140 cm Exhibited: -Amsterdam, Stedelijk Museum, 'Johan van Hell, Christiaan Schaaf, Sarah de Vries, Pau Wijnman', 1924, no. 43. -Arnhem, Museum voor Moderne Kunst, 'Van de Straat. Het sociaal engagement van Johan van Hell (1889-1952)', 12 November 2005-12 February 2006. Literature: -'Johan van Hell', in Nieuwe Rotterdamsche Courant, 14 September 1924. -Caroline Roodenburg-Schadd, Tineke Reijnders a.o., 'Van de Straat. Het sociaal engagement van Johan van Hell (1889-1952)', Warnsveld 2005, p. 22, ill. no. 27, inv. no. S52. -Caroline Roodenburg-Schadd, Tineke Reijnders a.o., 'Johan van Hell 1889-1952', Houten 2016, p. 22, ill. no. 33, inv. no. S52. Provenance: -Auction, Van Zadelhoff, Hilversum, February 2005. -Private collection, the Netherlands. Socialist first The multi-talented artist Johan van Hell was a graphic artist, painter, watercolourist, draftsman, lithographer, muralist, designer of book bindings and a professional musician. After WWII he became an almost forgotten artist, until the large exhibition of 1976 his work, organized in ‘t Coopmanshûs in Franeker (Friesland), put Johan van Hell back on the map and gave him a well-deserved place among the pre-war Dutch avant-garde artists. Further exhibitions in principal museums would follow and with every new exhibition, newly found works would be added: paintings, lithographs, posters and ex-libris designs. His esteem as a significant modern artist of the interbellum has grown ever since, along with an increasing interest in his powerful paintings. After having finished his artistic education at the Rijksacademie in Amsterdam, we find Van Hell still searching for his own visual vocabulary and style. In the 1910s he is experimenting with colour and topics and with various styles, but he only seems to find his true artistic bearings in the 1920s. His best - and best-known - work from the 1920s and 1930s shows topics that instantly reveal his social engagement and social-political views as being the chief impulse for his work. It conveys an abundance of hard-working people, like for example a fishmonger, a petrol man, street musicians, marching young socialists, market merchants, a window cleaner, in short, daily life in a typical working-class Amsterdam neighbourhood. These people are all depicted in a direct, almost monumental style with sharply delineated geometrical forms; sometimes these segments are filled in with subdued grey tones but often with hard undiluted colours. Van Hell was evenly committed to his two great passions: music and the visual arts. He could not live from either one, and he did not want to solely commit to only one passion, as giving up one obsession for the other would have been devasting for his artistic being. He worked like a mad man to earn his daily bread by teaching music, giving drawing lessons and by playing the clarinet as an interim at the Concertgebouw orchestra. But having a job at all, and especially one in your own field of interest, was already a privilege at the time. We are talking about the 1930s, with a looming economic crisis and numerous unemployed people, an unsteady period that did not allow for spending time on non-lucrative activities. Johan van Hell’s work would be part of many joint exhibitions during the interbellum; sometimes as part of the Amsterdam The Brug group, or as a member of the so-called ‘Positionists’, a group of young idealistic artists that would aim to make ‘understandable’ art for all people, as opposed to those artists who would make either unrelatable art (too bourgeois) or incomprehensible art (too modern). The art reviews of the 1920s and 1930s often mention Van Hell together with his contemporaries, like Bart van der Leck and Peter Alma His work, whether it concerns his posters for the socialist party, his murals or his paintings, does indeed show similarities to that of his avant garde art colleagues, both in subj

Auction archive: Lot number 152
Auction:
Datum:
16 Nov 2022
Auction house:
B.V. Venduehuis der Notarissen
Nobelstraat 5
2513 BC Den Haag
Netherlands
info@venduehuis.com
+31 (0)70 3658857
+31 (0)70 3462769
Beschreibung:

'De maaier' signed and dated 'Johan van Hell./1921' (lower left) oil on canvas, 150x140 cm Exhibited: -Amsterdam, Stedelijk Museum, 'Johan van Hell, Christiaan Schaaf, Sarah de Vries, Pau Wijnman', 1924, no. 43. -Arnhem, Museum voor Moderne Kunst, 'Van de Straat. Het sociaal engagement van Johan van Hell (1889-1952)', 12 November 2005-12 February 2006. Literature: -'Johan van Hell', in Nieuwe Rotterdamsche Courant, 14 September 1924. -Caroline Roodenburg-Schadd, Tineke Reijnders a.o., 'Van de Straat. Het sociaal engagement van Johan van Hell (1889-1952)', Warnsveld 2005, p. 22, ill. no. 27, inv. no. S52. -Caroline Roodenburg-Schadd, Tineke Reijnders a.o., 'Johan van Hell 1889-1952', Houten 2016, p. 22, ill. no. 33, inv. no. S52. Provenance: -Auction, Van Zadelhoff, Hilversum, February 2005. -Private collection, the Netherlands. Socialist first The multi-talented artist Johan van Hell was a graphic artist, painter, watercolourist, draftsman, lithographer, muralist, designer of book bindings and a professional musician. After WWII he became an almost forgotten artist, until the large exhibition of 1976 his work, organized in ‘t Coopmanshûs in Franeker (Friesland), put Johan van Hell back on the map and gave him a well-deserved place among the pre-war Dutch avant-garde artists. Further exhibitions in principal museums would follow and with every new exhibition, newly found works would be added: paintings, lithographs, posters and ex-libris designs. His esteem as a significant modern artist of the interbellum has grown ever since, along with an increasing interest in his powerful paintings. After having finished his artistic education at the Rijksacademie in Amsterdam, we find Van Hell still searching for his own visual vocabulary and style. In the 1910s he is experimenting with colour and topics and with various styles, but he only seems to find his true artistic bearings in the 1920s. His best - and best-known - work from the 1920s and 1930s shows topics that instantly reveal his social engagement and social-political views as being the chief impulse for his work. It conveys an abundance of hard-working people, like for example a fishmonger, a petrol man, street musicians, marching young socialists, market merchants, a window cleaner, in short, daily life in a typical working-class Amsterdam neighbourhood. These people are all depicted in a direct, almost monumental style with sharply delineated geometrical forms; sometimes these segments are filled in with subdued grey tones but often with hard undiluted colours. Van Hell was evenly committed to his two great passions: music and the visual arts. He could not live from either one, and he did not want to solely commit to only one passion, as giving up one obsession for the other would have been devasting for his artistic being. He worked like a mad man to earn his daily bread by teaching music, giving drawing lessons and by playing the clarinet as an interim at the Concertgebouw orchestra. But having a job at all, and especially one in your own field of interest, was already a privilege at the time. We are talking about the 1930s, with a looming economic crisis and numerous unemployed people, an unsteady period that did not allow for spending time on non-lucrative activities. Johan van Hell’s work would be part of many joint exhibitions during the interbellum; sometimes as part of the Amsterdam The Brug group, or as a member of the so-called ‘Positionists’, a group of young idealistic artists that would aim to make ‘understandable’ art for all people, as opposed to those artists who would make either unrelatable art (too bourgeois) or incomprehensible art (too modern). The art reviews of the 1920s and 1930s often mention Van Hell together with his contemporaries, like Bart van der Leck and Peter Alma His work, whether it concerns his posters for the socialist party, his murals or his paintings, does indeed show similarities to that of his avant garde art colleagues, both in subj

Auction archive: Lot number 152
Auction:
Datum:
16 Nov 2022
Auction house:
B.V. Venduehuis der Notarissen
Nobelstraat 5
2513 BC Den Haag
Netherlands
info@venduehuis.com
+31 (0)70 3658857
+31 (0)70 3462769
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