Cornelis Visscher (1629–1658)

Trois Crayons Newsletter, June 2025

 

Can we fool you? The term “fake” may be slightly sensationalist when it comes to old drawings. Copying originals and prints has formed a key part of an artist’s education since the Renaissance and with the passing of time the distinction between the two can be innocently mistaken.

 

Photo © President and Fellows of Harvard College

Photo © President and Fellows of Harvard College

Although these two drawings were made over a century apart, they have always belonged together. Both are ‘signed’ by Cornelis Visscher (1628/29 - 1658), although one is in fact a later reproduction. In 1991 the drawings were acquired by Maida and George Abrams and in 2018 they were promised as a gift to the Fogg Art Museum, Harvard University. But which is the original and which is the later version? Why might the latter have been made and what might their shared provenance imply?


 
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Claude Lorrain (1604/5?–1682), A View of Sant’ Agnese Fuori le Mura