Page:Hofstede de Groot catalogue raisonné, Volume 5, 1913.djvu/98

 82 GERARD TER BORCH SECT. 236. Gosewinus Hogers (1636-1716), Professor at Deventer. Full length. He is dressed in black velvet, and stands in his study at a table with a red velvet cover, upon which is a reading-desk with an open book. Very well and tenderly painted. [Pendant to 237.] Canvas, 29 inches by 24 inches. Sale. H. Aarentz of Deventer, Amsterdam April n, 1770, No. 12 (175 florins, with pendant, Yver). 237. Freda Quadacker (1646-1699), wife, from 1663, of Professor G. Hogers of Deventer. Full length. She stands at a table. Her hair falls in ringlets. She wears a black velvet dress and a satin skirt embroidered with gold. [Pendant to 236.] Canvas, 29^ inches by 24 inches. Salt. H. Aarentz of Deventer, Amsterdam, April n, 1770, No. 13 (175 florins, with pendant, Yver). Holland. See Mary Stuart, I. (235) and II. (277). Holland. See William I. (275) and William III. of Orange (276, 278-9). Count Hoorn. See William I. of Orange (275). 238. Jan Huydecoper (1600-1661), Lord of Maarsseveen, Neer- dijk, etc., Burgomaster of Amsterdam. J. B. Weenix worked on this portrait as well as Ter Borch. See Moes, Iconographia Batava, No. 3863, 6. Sale. De Gruyter and W. van der Breggen, Paris, December 14, 1871. Cornelia Irgens, born Bicker. [See 209.] 239. Karel du Jardin (1625-1678), Painter. [Possibly identical with 2390.] See Moes, Iconographia Batava, No. 4004, 7. In the Museum, Le Puy. 239*. Karel du Jardin. Very well and carefully painted. [Possibly identical with 239.] Canvas on panel, 25^ inches by 2o inches. Sale. Van Roothaan, Amsterdam, March 29, 1826, No. 108 (6 florins 10, Engesmet). 240. Caspar van Kinschot (1622-1649), Latin Poet ; a member of the Dutch Delegation to the Peace Congress at MUnster (1645-1648), where this portrait was painted. Half-length, turned to the left. Bare-headed with long brown curls. Grey dress slashed with white. Oval copper, 4 inches by 3 inches. A replica is now in the Kinschot collection. See Moes, Iconographia Batava, No. 4192, i and 2. Engraved by Wenzel Hollar. Exhibited at The Hague, 1890, No. 15.