Page:Hofstede de Groot catalogue raisonné, Volume 1, 1908.djvu/358

 334 GABRIEL METSU SECT. 249^. A Still- Life Piece. Sale. Pook and Theodoras van Pee, The Hague, May 23, 1747, No. 64 (15 florins 5). 250. A Still-Life Piece, with a Beer-Jug and a Herring. On a table is a split herring on a pewter plate, with a loaf, onions, and a knife, an earthenware beer-jug with a silver lid, and a glass flute. Canvas, 20 inches by I '] inches. Sales. Baron Schonborn, Amsterdam, April 16, 1738, No. 43 (18 florins). Hendrik Verschuuring, The Hague, September 17, 1770, No. 109 (Hoet, ii. 474). P. Locquet, Amsterdam, September 22, 1783, No. 223 (19 florins, Stegulair). 250*. A Still-Life Piece. On a table are a basket of vegetables and a basket of eggs, with two dead ducks. A dead fowl hangs at the side. Panel, 9 inches by 8 inches. Sale. H. ten Kate, Amsterdam, June 10, 1801. No. 109 (145 florins, Coders). 250^. A fine Picture. 24 inches by 18 inches. Sale. Willem van Wouw, The Hague, May 29, 1764, No. 25 (305 florins). CHRONOLOGICAL INDEX OF THE DATED PICTURES i644(?). 30^. The Court Physician. Pars sale, Frankfort, 1897. 1645 (?). 30^. The Military Surgeon. Pars sale, Frankfort, 1897. 1653. 9. Christ and the Woman taken in Adultery. Louvre. 1654. 56. A Man weighing Money. DemidofF sale, 1880. 1655. 157. A Man playing the Violin and a Woman singing. Schleissheim Gallery. 1661. no. A Visit to the Nursery. Rodolphe Kann collection, Paris, bought by Duveen, 1907. 169. Lovers at Breakfast. Dresden Gallery. 207. The Sportsman. The Hague Gallery. 1662. 43. The Man selling Poultry. Dresden Gallery. 44. The Young Woman selling Poultry. Dresden Gallery. 1663. 1 57<*. A Woman playing the Violoncello. Racynski collection, Ragolin. 1666. 5. Christ healing Peter's Mother-in-Law. In the possession of the London dealers, Lawrie and Son, 1896. 1667. 13. "Touch Me not !" Kunsthistorische Hofmuseum, Vienna. 170. A Young Couple at Breakfast. Karlsruhe Gallery. 248. Portrait of a Lady. Probably in one of the Rothschild collections, Paris. Note. 227 and 234 are said to be dated 1635, when Metsu was a child of five or six.