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Johanna Katharina Steiger, Aged 2

Albrecht Kauw1643

Auckland Art Gallery Toi o Tāmaki

Auckland Art Gallery Toi o Tāmaki
Auckland, New Zealand

This little girl has been identified as Johanna Katharina Steiger, the daughter of a prominent family in Bern, Switzerland. An inscription on the painting led to her identification. As inscriptions and labels are not always to be trusted, when they first discovered the work, Dutch dealers Hoogsteder & Hoogsteder called on Valentine von Fellenberg, a genealogist in Bern, Switzerland, who after intense investigation was able to identify Johanna and her parents, Georg Steiger (1612–1686) and Maria von Diesbach (born 1617).

Further searching revealed the probable artist of the unsigned work: the multi-talented yet seldom found Albrecht Kauw (1616–1681), better known for his still-life paintings. Although the canvas is unsigned, according to Hoogsteders, the expression, the cheeks, the lips, the hands and the way the lace and sleeves are painted are all typical of Kauw ’s manner of painting. As a friend and frequent guest of Johanna’s father, he would have come in regular contact with Johanna, and so was an obvious choice to paint her portrait.

The South American blue-crown conure, one of the liveliest and most playful of parrots, indicates the collecting opportunities that came with trade, but its ability to learn speech also reinforces that children should be well taught. The Swiss expert in this field, Georges Herzog , has called this one of the most delightful and moving examples of Bern art of the mid-17th century. The von Muralt family kept the portrait for three and a half centuries.

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  • Title: Johanna Katharina Steiger, Aged 2
  • Creator: Albrecht Kauw
  • Creator Lifespan: 1616/1681
  • Creator Nationality: Switzerland
  • Creator Gender: Male
  • Date Created: 1643
  • Physical Dimensions: w705 x h928 mm (Without frame)
  • Artist biography: Albrecht Kauw was born in 1621. He is considered one of Bern’s leading still-life painters of the 17th century. According to a history of Bern, he was also a cartographer and a painter of vedute, and as such had a significant influence on the history of Swiss landscape painting. According to Benizet, he worked mainly in Bern, where he had already settled by 1640. He carried out a large number of decorations for public buildings in this town and for various chateaux. His son, Albrecht Kauw the Younger apparently worked as a painter in Basel, but no works by him have been identified. Kauw died in 1681.
  • Type: Painting
  • Rights: Mackelvie Trust Collection, Auckland Art Gallery Toi o Tāmaki, purchased with assistance from the Gallery, 2010
  • External Link: Auckland Art Gallery Toi o Tāmaki
  • Medium: oil on canvas
Auckland Art Gallery Toi o Tāmaki

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