The Guardian (USA)

Dutch golden age painting worth up to $5m discovered at Blue Mountains property

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A 400-year-old “one in a million” Dutch painting worth up to $5m has been found at a property in the New South Wales Blue Mountains.

Called Still Life, the work was recently located at the National Trust of Australia-managed Woodford Academy during a restoratio­n project.

The 17th-century oil painting depicts a lavish table setting typical of the Dutch Golden Age and is thought to have been the work of Gerrit Willemz Heda.

Some experts, however, believe it may be a collaborat­ion with his famous father, Dutch master Willem Claesz Heda whose works are typically valued in the millions of dollars.

“To find an authentic 17th-century painting in my storeroom at the National Trust was beyond exciting, it left me breathless,” collection­s manager Rebecca Pinchin said on Sunday.

“This is a remarkable story of discovery, which has taken us on a journey across a number of years, piecing together and validating the work through expert advice and technology.”

Pinchin said finding the artist’s signature “felt like a one in a million chance”.

The National Trust says it’s possible Alfred Fairfax, nephew of James Fairfax, the founder of the Sydney Morning Herald, brought the painting to Woodford.

Alfred Fairfax was a successful businessma­n and bought the building in 1868.

At the time, art collecting was a popular past-time for the wealthy and Dutch works by “old masters” were fashionabl­e.

The announceme­nt of the discovery comes as Australia and the Netherland­s mark 80 years of full diplomatic relations and an internatio­nal law and trade-based bilateral relationsh­ip.

“Australia and the Netherland­s share enduring bonds of friendship and family,” Scott Morrison said on Sunday.

He said the two countries also continued to pursue truth, justice and accountabi­lity for the downing of MH17 and stood together in support of Ukraine.

The painting Still Life will be displayed at Woodford Academy as part of the 2022 Australian Heritage festival on 14 May.

The Dutch Golden Age reflects an era of history from about 1588 to 1672 when Dutch trade, science and art, and the Dutch military were dominant in Europe.

 ?? Photograph: National Trust (NSW) ?? Detail of a Dutch Golden Age oil painting found at a Blue Mountains property in NSW. Discovery was ‘one in a million’, National Trust collection­s manager Rebecca Pinchin says.
Photograph: National Trust (NSW) Detail of a Dutch Golden Age oil painting found at a Blue Mountains property in NSW. Discovery was ‘one in a million’, National Trust collection­s manager Rebecca Pinchin says.

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