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A Still Life of Peaches on a silver Tazza with a Melon, an Apple, Grapes and
Figs on a stone Ledge.
Jacob Bogdani is best known as the foremost painter of exotic animal and bird
compositions of the late seventeenth and early eighteenth centuries. He was
born in Eperjes, Saros, in Hungary in 1658. He worked in Amsterdam from 1684
and in 1686 shared a residence there with Ernst Stuven, the well-known still
life painter. Bogdani arrived in London in 1688 and became known as 'The
Hungarian'. Here he soon acquired a considerable reputation as a specialist
still life and bird painter at the court of Queen Anne and several of his
paintings are in the Royal Collection.
One of his early commissions was a set of flowerpieces for Queen Mary's 'Looking
glasse closett in the Thames gallery' at Hampton Court Palace. Bogdani also
supplied paintings for King William's palace at Dieren, Holland. One of his
most important patrons was Admiral George Churchill, the Duke of Marlborough's
brother, whose famous Windsor aviary might have provided subjects for some of
his works. Several of George Churchill's pictures are now in the Royal
collection, having been acquired by Queen Anne after his death in 1710.
His canvases are usually crowded with groups of exotic wild fowl displaying all
their colourful finery to their best.
Museums where examples of the artist's work can be found include:
Budapest (Hungarian National Gallery), Chatsworth House, London (The Victoria
and Albert Museum, The Royal Collection), Nottingham Castle Museum.
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