There are hundreds of exceptional artworks adorning the stands at TEFAF Maastricht this year. Everyone will have their own favourites, but we urge any visitor to seek out these works, which happen to be some of ours…Maggie Gray selects her TEFAF Treasures
Tree (1908), Piet Mondrian
Haboldt & Co
A Collector’s Cabinet (17th century)
Adriaen van Stalbempt
De Jonckheere Master Paintings
This painting of well-dressed visitors poring over valuable art objects could hardly be better suited to TEFAF 2015. In 17th-century Flanders – as today – to possess a cabinet of curiosities was a sign of both wealth and refinement, and there’s a surplus of both on display here. In the near right corner a group of men inspect scientific specimens and treatises. By the door is a selection of musical instruments; fragments of classical sculpture sit in the near left corner; and the far wall is packed with paintings, several of which seem to mimic extant works by the likes of Peter Neefs, Snijders, and Adam Willaerts.
The (unidentified) figures in this sumptuous interior, which could be a collector’s private home or a dealer’s gallery, are clearly a cultivated crowd. But right in the centre of the room, two of them consider a painting with a rather subversive twist. In it, a group of men with animal heads smash the objects that the rest hold so dear. A warning against brutish ignorance, perhaps – but is it coincidence that they are dressed so similarly to the refined men in the room?
Adriaen van Stalbempt’s painting has been given pride of place on De Jonckheere’s stand. Whoever does take it home will be in good company: a similar example by the artist is in the Prado in Madrid.
Self-Portrait III (2014)
Frank Auerbach
Malborough, London
Until recently, Auerbach rarely turned his hand to self-portraiture. But now, at the age of 83, he has done quite a few, and I find this one – a large graphite and chalk study on paper – captivating. Auerbach’s characteristically wavering line, which refuses to trace the contours of a face in the traditional fashion and instead ranges over it in restless, exploratory touches, introduces a sense of vulnerability to the image, despite the confidence suggested in the turn of his head. He seems to flicker in and out of focus – unmistakeable but curiously indefinable, which is a rather neat reflection of the elusive nature of portraiture more generally. It more than holds its own with the highly finished, colourful works on the surrounding stands.
A triptych of the Virgin and Child in a Church, with the Nativity and a kneeling donor accompanied by standing saints (c. 1500), The Master of 1499, Southern Netherlands, probably Ghent
Sam Fogg, London
It was the jewel-like intensity of the colours that first drew me to this northern Renaissance triptych on Sam Fogg’s stand, and its complex iconography that kept me there. Attributed to a little-known but clearly very accomplished artist known as The Master of 1499, it consists of five painted panels (the folding wings are worked on both sides) and is packed with religious symbolism.
TEFAF Maastricht is at the Maastricht Exhibition & Congress Centre from 13–22 March.
Related Articles
TEFAF Treasures: Digby Warde-Aldam
TEFAF 2015: Susan Moore previews the Maastricht fair
Beyond TEFAF: what else is there to see in the region this month?
Click here to buy the current issue of Apollo for more TEFAF highlights