Page:Hofstede de Groot catalogue raisonné, Volume 2, 1909.djvu/50

 34 AELBERT CUYP SECT. 92. Prince Maurice. [Identical with 89 ?] Panel, 14 inches by 23 inches. Sale. J. Hargreaves, London, 1873 (126, Newman). 92*. Supposed Portrait of the Prince of Orange. With a pony and dog. Sale. Harding, London, 1885 (102 : 1 8s., Ward). 93. Supposed Portrait of the King of Bohemia. With a white collar. Panel, 25 inches by 20 inches. Sale. London, July 9, 1901, No. 358. 94. PORTRAIT OF A BOY OF THE VAN DER BURGH FAMILY. Three-quarter length. He stands at a window, and wears a brown costume almost covered with a white pinafore, a white jacket and cap. He holds a small flute. It is a good picture, but differs wholly from Cuyp's ordinary style of portraiture : for instance, it has not the reddish flesh-tones customary with him. The signature and statement of age are unquestionably genuine. Moreover, there is a coat-of-arms : or, bendlets wavy gules. Thus the boy belonged to the Van der Burgh family of Dordrecht, and was not an Orange Prince, as was formerly supposed. Signed, "A. Cuijp fecit. Aetatis suae I Jaer" ; panel, 16 inches by 12 inches. In the collection of the Duke of Modena. Sales. Baron Clary, Paris, May 2, 1872. Jules Lenglard, Paris, 1902. In the possession of the Paris dealer C. Scdelmeyer, "Catalogue of loo Paintings," 1902, No. 3. In the collection of Henri Heugel, Paris. 95. Portrait of a Child of the Roozendael Family. Sale. Brussels, August I, 1842, No. 24. 96. Portrait of Maria Strick van Scharlaaken. As a shepherdess with a crook; she feeds two sheep. The picture is inscribed: "Maria Strick van Scharlaaken Regneer's Dogter, geboren den 13 ten October 1646, en overleden den 15 ten Juni 1669." 32 inches by 24^ inches. Mentioned by Waagen (Suppl. 200). In the collection of James Tulloch, London, 1857. 97. PORTRAIT OF A FAMILY IN A LANDSCAPE. A lady dressed as a shepherdess sits on a mound, racing the spectator. She wears a yellow gown with large sleeves and a garland of flowers on her head. At her feet lies a crook. With her right arm she embraces her little daughter, who stands beside her, dressed in white. The child points to her father, who, dressed in white and having a garland of vine- leaves, hands her an apple. To the right are two sheep and a boy in brown riding on a goat. Farther back, the eldest daughter, dressed as a