Page:Hofstede de Groot catalogue raisonné, Volume 3, 1910.djvu/174

This page needs to be proofread.

160 ADRIAEN VAN OSTADE SECT. Sa/fs. London, July 21, 1902, No. 136. Cunliffe, London, May 9, 1903, No. 129. 61. A WOMAN WITH A WINE-GLASS IN AN EMBRASURE. A small picture. In the collection of Lord Ashburton, The Grange ; bought as a whole by the London dealers T. Agnew and Sons, August 1907. 6ia. A Cottage: A Woman looking out of the Window. Engraved by Fr. van den Steen. 62. FIVE PEASANTS AT A WINDOW. The window is divided into two halves, at each of which are two men. On the right another man leans out j he holds a glass of beer in his right hand and a cap in his left. The window is overgrown with foliage at the top. A broken jug and two pipes are hung on the central post. [Probably identical with 63.] Signed in full on the right at foot ; panel, 1 1 inches by 9^ inches. Exhibited at the Royal Academy Winter Exhibition, London, 1879, No. 112, and 1908, No. 67. In the collection of Samuel Sanders, London. In the collection of A. P. Heywood Lonsdale, Shavington. 62a. Peasants singing at a Window. io| inches by 9 inches. Sale. Philip van Dijk, The Hague, June 13, 1753 (Terw. 73), No. 64 (61 florins, Cruytsman). 62^. Three Musical Peasants lying in a Window. Panel, 10 inches by 8 inches. Sale. J. G. Cramer, Amsterdam, November 13, 1769, No. 72 (195 florins). 63. Five Peasants at a Window. Sm. 166 ; Suppl. 76. It is divided in the middle. Two of them lean on the sill. Another holds a cap in one hand and a glass in the other, and has made one of his com- panions laugh. [Probably identical with 62.] Panel, n inches by 7 inches or, according to Sm., about 13 inches by 15 inches. Sale. Robert de St. Victor, Paris, November 26, 1822 (2400 francs). In the collection of Chevalier de Claussin, Paris, 1829 (Sm.). In the collection of Charles Brind, London, 1842 (Sm.). Sale.E. W. Lake, London, 1845 (168, Farrer). 64. A MAN LEANING OUT OF A WINDOW WITH A LIGHTED LANTERN. Sm. Suppl. 70. He has a good-humoured face. Behind him stands an elderly woman. Both look intently at some object. A pleasing but unimportant picture of the middle period. [Possibly identical with 65^.] Engraved by C. Dalco as " Villano con Lanterna." In the Uffizi, Florence, 1891 catalogue, No. 978 ; it was there in 1842 (Sm., who valued it at 100).