Page:Hofstede de Groot catalogue raisonné, Volume 3, 1910.djvu/190

 1 76 ADRIAEN VAN OSTADE SECT. iQQtfz. A Hurdy-Gurdy Player. Panel, 4 inches by 3 inches. Sale. Amsterdam, May 1 6, 1877, No. 27. 1 10. THE HURDY-GURDY PLAYER. Half-length. He sits facing the spectator, turning his hurdy-gurdy with his right hand. He wears a broad-brimmed hat and a black jacket with light-grey sleeves. Signed in full, and dated 16 ; panel, 8 inches by 6| inches. Exhibited in the Rembrandt exhibition of the Amsterdam dealers Fred. Muller and Co., 1906, No. 100. 1 1 00. A Rommelpot-Player. Sale. Gerard van Sypes or Everard van Sypestein Utrecht, April n, 1714 (Hoet, i. 172), No. 10 (60 florins). in. AN OLD MAN MENDING A PEN IN HIS STUDY. Sm. Suppl. 44. Half-length, full face. He wears a brown cap and jacket. The prevailing tone is brown, without local colour. Panel, 13 inches by io| inches. In the collection of Prince Esterhazy, Vienna, 1842 (Sm.). In the Budapest Museum of Fine Arts, 1906 catalogue, No. 531 (old No. 286). 112. A MAN MENDING A PEN. He sits, with his hat on, facing left, at a little round table, on which are a paper and an ink-pot. He is cutting a quill pen. On the floor to the left are two folio volumes, one lying flat, the other upright. In the back wall is a little window ; to the right is a door. Of the middle period, about 1645. Panel, 8 inches by 6 inches. In the Karlsruhe Gallery ; 1894 catalogue, No. 246. 1 1 ia. A Man mending a Pen. 9^ inches by 8 inches. Sale. Gillis van Hoven, Amsterdam, March 24, 1755 (Terw. ill), No. 3 (390 florins, Balgrio). 113. A Man mending a Pen. In a room, beside a table covered with papers and other things, a man sits mending a pen. On the floor beside him are books and other things. Panel, 9 inches by 7 inches. Sale. Amsterdam, August 10, 1785, No. 247 (14 florins, Wubbels). 1130. A Man mending a Pen. In a room a man sits mending a pen. On a table beside him are writing materials. Panel, 9 inches by 7 inches. Sale. G. Schimmelpenninck, Amsterdam, July 12, 1819, No. 86 (20 florins, De Vries). 113^. A Man mending a Pen. A peasant is busy cutting a quill pen. Sale. (Supplementary) W. J. Schellink and others, Rotterdam, April 24, 1834, No. 196.