Manner of Johann Georg Meyer von Bremen Hessian Peasant Girl with Flower Basket

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An original mid-19th-century oil painting, Manner of Johann Georg Meyer von Bremen, Hessian Peasant Girl with Flower Basket.

A captivating small oil painting, full of charm. A Hessian German peasant girl in bonnet and red dress stands in the shade of soft foliage, surrounded by delicate flower blossoms. Shadowy cloisters to the right contrast with the bright patch of sunlight cast to the left.

This subject and the treatment of foliage is highly characteristic of Johann Georg Meyer von Bremen (1813–1886), a German painter associated with the Düsseldorf School of painting, who specialised in Biblical, peasant, and family scenes.

Meyer studied at the Kunstakademie Düsseldorf under Friedrich Wilhelm Schadow. In 1841, he opened a studio of his own and in 1853 he moved to Berlin as his fame increased. His early works were often scenes from the Bible, but he later turned his attention to incidents from popular life, especially among the Hessian peasantry, and the portrayal of family life, including spirited depictions of children. He was a member of the Amsterdam Academy and was awarded the Order of Leopold and Medal in Philadelphia in 1876.

In oil paint on unstretched canvas.

+ Read the S&W Collection Research

Düsseldorf School Collection

This picture forms part of an intriguing collection of works that we have for sale connected with the Düsseldorf School of Painting. Collected together by a single owner, the pictures in the collection date from the mid-19th century and include works by Andreas Achenbach (1815–1910), Wilhelm Camphausen (1818–1885), Luise Henriette von Martens (1828–1897) and in the manner of Johann Georg Meyer von Bremen (1813–1886).

The Düsseldorf School is considered part of the German Romantic movement, and whilst not having one unified style, the works of its exponents were often finely detailed, extravagant and fanciful landscapes. The term is used to describe the artistic activity from 1826 to 1859 which centred around the Düsseldorf Academy of Fine Arts under the instruction of director Friedrich Wilhelm von Schadow. Andreas Achenbach was one of the earliest and most influential artists of the Academy; Wilhelm Camphausen was an historical and battle painter who was appointed professor at the Academy in 1859; Johann Georg Meyer von Bremen studied there in his twenty-first year; and Luise Henriette von Martens studied at the Academy with Karl Ferdinand Sohn. The reputation of the Kunstakademie Düsseldorf continued into the 20th century, with illustrious alumni including Joseph Beuys, Gerhard Richter and Anselm Kiefer, and Andreas Gursky, and in the 1970s the school became renowned for photography under influential professors Bernd and Hilla Becher.

The collection also includes works by Captain Augustus Savile Lumley (fl.1855–1881) and members of the Ogle family, a prominent landed family in Northumberland. It is possible that the pictures were in the possession of the Ogle family; there are a number of Scottish subjects and a drawing by Sophia Ogle, who married Reverend Hugh Willoughby Jermyn, D.D, Lord Bishop of Brechin and Primus of Scotland.

+ Artwork Details

Dimensions: Height: 15.3cm (6.02") Width: 12.6cm (4.96")

Presented: Unframed.

Medium: Oil

Age: Mid-19th-century

Signed: No.

Inscribed: --

Dated: --

Condition: There are some faint scattered surface marks, which appear as faint flecks of blooming, mainly visible when held in raking light. Otherwise, the colours are well preserved and canvas well intact. Please see photos for detail.

Stock number: JP-550