This section provides a detailed description of the painting, based on a thorough visual examination conducted by a paintings conservator.
Overview
Support
The support of a painting refers to the material on which the paint layers are applied. Over time, artists have used a variety of materials as supports, including canvas, wooden panels, copper plates, cardboard, and paper. The choice of support influences the painting’s texture, durability, and how it ages. It can also offer valuable insights into the artwork’s origin, technique, and historical context.
An industrial canvas of a medium grade and a plain weave.
The description of the canvas is based on a surplus fragment removed before the treatment in 1986. An inscription on the reverse of the canvas, now hidden by the loose lining, reads: 'Malet af V. Hammershøi
Udst. 1915
Nr. 24
Karl Madsen'
Stretcher
A stretcher is a wooden frame used to stretch and secure a canvas. It is typically designed with expandable joints and small wooden wedges (called keys) that allow adjustments to maintain the tension of the canvas over time. This helps prevent sagging as the canvas responds to aging or changes in humidity. In contrast, a strainer is a similar wooden frame but non-expandable, meaning it cannot be adjusted once the canvas is mounted.
Mortise and tenon with rectangular corner plates
Stretching
There is evidence of the origitnal stretching in the form of large nail holes.
Ground layer
The ground layer is a preparatory layer applied directly to the support to create a smooth surface for painting. It is typically opaque and monochrome in color, providing a neutral base that influences the subsequent application of paint layers and the final appearance of the painting. The composition of the ground layer varies depending on the type of support and the historical period of the artwork. Hammershøi typically painted on white and industrially primed canvasses.
The imprimatura varies a little in hue from a slightly transparent, greyish brown in the lower part of the painting to a more cool transparent shade of the same colour in the sky.
Underdrawing
The underdrawing is a preliminary sketch applied directly onto the ground layer, serving as an outline for the composition or parts of it before the paint layers are added. These drawings are often not visible to the naked eye but can be revealed through infrared imaging (IRR and IR-R-IR) if carried out with a carbon-containing material on a light-coloured ground layer. The underdrawings can offer valuable insight into the artist’s creative process and planning, showing how the composition evolved prior to the final painting.
Underdrawing is visible to the naked eye everywhere in the architectural elements. Some of the horizontal lines of the drawing continue onto the left and right tacking edges, including the sections folded onto the reverse of the stretcher. It indicates an initial size of the composition that was wider than the present format, which is marked with a black line on all four sides. Underdrawing is also faintly visible in the gateway and the void between the two buildings, where vertical and horizontal lines suggest ships masts and cross yards. Slight, almost vertical incisions in the surface texture near the top edge of the sky may be incompletely obliterated remnants of the design.
The underdrawing varies in thickness and colour from narrow grey lines to wider black lines, indicating a process where the initial layout was carried out in a thin grey pencil, whereas the ultimate composition was established with wider and darker lines.
Underpainting
The underpainting is an initial layer of paint applied between the underdrawing and the final paint layers, serving as a foundation for the subsequent application of color. It is often executed in a monochrome palette and helps establish the tonal values and final modelling of the composition.
The painting, being a preliminary work, appears to have been abandoned while still incomplete and at the stage of underpainting. A few small square paint strokes were perhaps applied for testing the intended tonality of the final painting.
Paint layer
Paint layers are applied over the ground layer and are composed of pigments or colorants mixed with a binding medium. Throughout history, artists have used various binders. In the Middle Ages, egg yolk was commonly used in tempera painting for altar pieces, while during the Renaissance, oil became the preferred medium. In modern times, synthetic binders such as those found in acrylic paints are also widely used. In Hammershøi’s time, artists painted mainly with oil paint. The paint layer forms the visible image of the artwork and is often built up in multiple layers to create effects of color, texture, depth, and transparency.
A thinly applied paint layer with a simple stratigraphy and alternating translucent and more opaque paint strokes and a very slight impasto only in the purplish grey walls of the buildings.
The paint application is largely wet-in-wet in the buildings and the sky with a somewhat blurred character in many places. The direction of the brush strokes is predominantly diagonal in the walls of the buildings, whereas the brushwork of the sky has no predominant orientation. The brushwork has an even, undulating character locally in the roofs.
Varnish
A varnish is sometimes applied as a final transparent layer over the dried paint layer to protect the artwork from dust, dirt, and mechanical damage. In addition to providing protection, varnish saturates the colours and evens out the surface gloss. Over time, this layer may yellow, or degrade. Until the 20th century, it was common practice to varnish oil paintings. In Hammershøi’s time, however, oil paintings were not always varnished, and we know that Hammershøi sometimes deliberately chose to leave his works unvarnished.
Considering the preliminary and unfinished character of the painting, it is questionable whether it was intended to be varnished
Frame
The decorative frame serves both protective and aesthetic purposes and can be original to the artwork or added at a later time. Historical frames may provide valuable information about the artwork’s provenance, often through inscriptions, labels, or stamps found on the reverse side.
Various exhibition labels and inscriptions in blue crayon are hidden by a microclimate frame.
With multispectral imaging images of an artwork are captured at different wavelength bands across the electromagnetic spectrum – such as ultraviolet, visible, and infrared light, as well as x-rays. Each band can reveal specific features and uncover or enhance details invisible to the naked eye, offering valuable insights into an artwork – such as the materials used, the presence of underdrawings and hidden layers, alterations made by the artist, and traces of past conservation treatments.
Multispectral imaging
Click on one of the images below to explore the painting by comparing different image types with an advanced image viewer. To ensure accurate visual comparison within the viewer, a precise image registration has been performed. If the images below look slightly distorted, this is caused by the image registration proces that ensures precise comparability in the viewer.
Weave maps
Weave maps are detailed visualisations of the thread patterns in a canvas, created by applying thread counting on high-resolution x-radiographs. These are used for analysing the structure of the canvas and to compare canvases used in different paintings. A comparison between weave maps can sometimes determine if two or more pieces of canvas derive from the same batch and thereby shed light on the place and period in which a painting has been created.
This section presents comments and notes concerning the art historical context of the painting, including its provenance and its relationship with other works by Hammershøi based on their history and motifs. Combined with technical analysis, this contextual approach can inspire further research into groups of paintings that may be connected by time, place, composition, or materials.
Description from the Bramsen catalogue
ASIATISK COMPAGNIES BYGNINGER. Christianshavn. Set fra St. Annæ Gade. Forarbejde til Billedet Nr. 236. Saavel Bygninger som Luft er holdte lysere end paa Billedet. Med Blyant antydes her Master og Ræer af Skibe imellem de to Bygninger. Grunden til at Maleren forlod dette Lærred, var at han vilde have større Forgrund og derfor — paa Udstillings-Billedet — medtog Hjørnerne af de to Huse i St. Annæ Gade. Bygningerne maatte desuden ses mere fra højre Side, saafremt Billedets Ligevægt skulde bevares naar den store Skibsmast blev anbragt klods op ad Bygningen tilhøjre — saaledes som paa Billedet.
(Transl.): THE BUILDINGS OF THE ASIATIC COMPANY. Christianshavn. Viewed from St. Annæ Street. Preliminary work for the picture no. 236. Buildings as well as the air are kept lighter than in the picture. In pencil is here suggested masts and yards of ships between the two buildings. The reason why the painter abandoned this canvas was that he wanted a larger foreground and therefore – in the exhibition picture – included the corners of the two houses in St. Annæ Street. The buildings furthermore had to be seen more from the right-hand side to keep the balance when the big ship’s mast was placed immediately next to the right-hand building – as in the picture.
Conservation documentation
According to the archives at SMK:
1970 Rentoileret
1986 Conservation report
1993 Restored, no report.
2011 Conservation report.
References, sources and notes
Ref. Hvidt and Oelsner (2018) p. 290-327. This extraordinary motif, mainly consisting of a framed empty space, occupied Hammershøis time in many ways. Already in 1899 he made a smaller painting with this motif (Bramsen no. 188). In 1902 he photographed and painted the gate at the buildings of the Asiatic Company several times. He lived in the same street, Strandgade, and was very interested in exactly this architectural setting. Later on it would become his own home. In another version of the motif now at the Ordrupgaard Collection (Bramsen no. 236) he included a ship's mast which is only partly sketched up with pencil in the middle of this composition. This is clearly a favourite motif for the artist considering Hammershøis profound interest in painting lines and his ability to create a photographic framing and atmosphere in his paintings. From Poul Vad we know that Hammershøi used a photography to capture and imagine this specific angle. The whereabouts of this photograph is unknown today, but it is illustrated in Vad (1988), p. 242 as well as in Hvidt and Oelsner (2018), p. 326.
Provenance
Sold at the estate auction of the artist 1616. In 1918 in the collection of A. Bramsen. Auctioned Charlottenborg 1944, cat. 68. The artist Th. Hagedorn Olsen, who sold it to SMK 2. October 1970
Comments
This mansion at the address Strandgade 25 in Copenhagen had previously housed The Asiatic Company and was originally built after drawings by the architect Philip de Lange in 1738. When living opposite this building in Strandgade 30 in the period from 1898 to 1908 Vilhelm and Ida Hammershøi dreamt about moving into it - a dream that should later be fulfilled, when the couple in 1913 had the chance and the possibility to move into a large apartment situated on the first floor in exactly this building the so-called Asiatic Company Building. They lived there until the death of the artist in 1916.
Images/Files
All images and files related to this painting are listed below. You may choose to download the complete set or select specific items as needed.
Support
Underdrawing
Multispectral imaging
Weave maps
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