Page:Hofstede de Groot catalogue raisonné, Volume 5, 1913.djvu/74

 5 8 GERARD TER BORCH SECT. 3. Sales.]. F. d'Orvielle, Amsterdam, July 15, 1705 (Hoet, i. 83), No. 42 (140 florins). M. Watering, Amsterdam, September 9, 1813, No. 45 (96 florins, Mijburg) attributed to C. Netscher. S. M. de Boer, Amsterdam. April 15, 1840, No. 66 (170 florins, Brondgeest). 4. Sale. M. Vogrich of Weimar, Berlin, November 22, 1904, No. 91 a copy in reverse, attributed to Mieri?. Lithographed by L. Quaglio and V. Leng. In the Dllsseldorf Gallery, transferred to Mannheim in 1730, No. 156. In the Mannheim Gallery, 1756, No. 115. In the Aeltere Pinakothek, Munich, 1911 catalogue, No. 389. 158*. A Boy with a Dish at which a Dog jumps up. Sale. W. van Haansbergen, The Hague, June 19, 1755, No. 69 (9 florins, Wannaar). 158^. A Boy with a Dog. 12 inches by 8| inches. Sale. Amsterdam, September 26, 1763, No. 62. 159. The Pet Dog. Sm. 24. A comely young woman sits on a chair, with a little dog in her lap. She wears a black velvet jacket lined with white fur and a green petticoat. Beside her is a spinning-wheel. Panel, 13 inches by io| inches. Sale. Jan Tak, Soeterwoude, near Leyden, September 5, 1781 (530 florins). 159^. A Lady with a Bunch of Roses. Sm. 66. A lady, seen in full face, sits leaning on a table. She has a single rose in one hand and a bunch of roses in the other. On the table are a jewel-case, a candlestick, and some ornaments. In front of the table is a chair, with a mantle hanging over the back. The original is lost. Described by Sm. (1833) from an engraving by R. Gallard, entitled "La Soucieuse Hollandoise." 1 60. THE LOVERS (or, Lady pouring Wine). Sm. Suppl. 22. Half-length. A young lady in a scarlet jacket sits in profile, pouring out a glass of wine from a silver jug. On the opposite side of the table sits a young man in a dark costume with a large hat, who is filling his pipe. Behind them an old woman approaches the table to offer a dish of eatables. Waagen describes it as "a good picture in very bad condition" (iv. 297). Canvas, 13^ inches by 10 inches. [Panel, 13 inches by io| inches, according to the New York catalogue. Translator.] [Exhibited at the Hudson-Fulton Celebration, Metropolitan Museum, New York, 1909, No. 129. Translator.] Sales. P. Locquet, Amsterdam, September 22, 1783, No. 358 (51 florins, Beckman). J. Goll van Franckenstein, Amsterdam, July I, 1833 (810 florins, J. Woodin). Sm. regards this as a replica, but it may very well have been the original.