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Art fair

TEFAF Maastricht 2025

Nicholas Hall exhibits at TEFAF Maastricht 2025 – Stand 363
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NICHOLAS HALL
TEFAF Maastricht 2024
new position – stand 363
MECC Forum 100
6229 GV Maastricht
The Netherlands
13 – 20 March 2025
Register and visit the fair

Nicholas Hall is pleased to return to the 2025 edition of TEFAF Maastricht at stand 363. Highlights include an exceptionally rare half-length portrait by Anthonis Mor from his Antwerp period, circa 1550. Following this pivotal moment in his career, the Utrecht-born artist would go on to become one of the most celebrated portrait painters of his time, producing the likeness of Europe’s most powerful figures such as Philip II of Spain, King John III of Portugal and Mary Tudor, future Queen of England. Until last year Half-Length Portrait of a Man has remained in the family of the American magnate Samuel H. Kress. Another storied collection to which it has belonged is that of Angela, 1st Baroness Burdett-Coutts, one of the richest women and philanthropists in Victorian England.

This year we have a particularly high number of works from Northern Europe. This includes a Doctor of the Church painted in Rome by the Utrecht Caravaggisti Dirck van Baburen; a tronie (character study) by the Monogrammist I.S., an anonymous artist in the orbit of Rembrandt whose first ever monographic exhibition is just about to open in Mäntä, Finland followed by Leiden, the Netherlands; and a unique version of Death and the Miser by Frans Francken the Younger featuring a convex mirror, possibly a citation from another iconic critique of mercantile greed – Quentin Metsys’s 1514 Monelender and His Wife (Musé du Louvre, Paris, inv. 1444) which Francken could well have seen while it belonged to the Antwerp spice merchant and maecenas Cornelis van der Geest.

Also from the seventeenth century are works by María Josefa Sánchez and Mary Beale, leading female artists in Castille and London. Two of our 18th-century paintings, by Hackert and Platzer, hung in Royal collections in Italy and Russia. ❖

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