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CLASSIC

◇ Quiet Afternoon in the Nursery

◇ Quiet Afternoon in the Nursery

Regular price $23.66 USD
Regular price Sale price $23.66 USD
Sale Sold out

ABOUT THIS PRINT

  • Printed on museum-quality fine art paper
  • Carefully restored for clarity and true-to-original color
  • Archival inks for long-lasting color
  • Professionally color-calibrated
  • Premium, high-resolution reproduction
  • Printed on demand in the USA

Shipping & Return Policy

Prints: 1-2 weeks
Framed prints and decor: 2-3 weeks
Returns within 2 weeks.

Premium Framed prints are custom assembled and cannot be returned.
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Classic vs. Premium

Classic Line = Affordable prints and modern frames typically in standard sizes.

Premium Framed Collection = Premium hand-built frames, and unique print sizes.

This 1921 drawing by Dutch artist Otto Verhagen I captures a tender, domestic moment of his son, Otto Verhagen II, absorbed in a creative task. The scene is rendered with a luminous, soft-focus quality, utilizing a vibrant yet gentle palette of butter yellows, pistachio greens, and warm corals. There is a profound sense of stillness in the composition, inviting the viewer into a private world where the focus of childhood play meets the refined aesthetic of an early 20th-century interior.

Why We Picked It
The work is a compelling example of how Verhagen balanced the structural influence of the Dutch Decadent movement with a more intimate, impressionistic approach to family life. The composition is notably dense, featuring layered patterns—from the wicker chair’s lattice to the floral tablecloth and the geometric textile in the background—yet it remains grounded by the central figure of the child. The choice of medium allows for a delicate, textured application of color that creates a rhythmic "swarming life" across the surface, a hallmark of Verhagen’s more mature, organic style.

Notable Context
Created in 1921, this piece sits at a crossroads between late Symbolist influences and the burgeoning Modernist interestin domesticity. Otto Verhagen I was deeply influenced by the Decadent movement and artists like Aubrey Beardsley and Karel de Nerée tot Babberich, often imbuing his early works with an atmospheric, somewhat theatrical weight. However, by the 1920s, his style shifted toward the biomorphic and the intimate. This drawing documents a lineage of artistry; the subject, Otto Verhagen II, would later become a notable painter, draftsman, and museum director in his own right, famously assisting in the recovery of Nazi-looted art after World War II.

About the Artist
Otto Verhagen (1885–1951) was a Dutch painter and draftsman who maintained a unique dual career as a government official and a private artist. Because he rarely exhibited his work publicly during his lifetime, his portfolio retains a sense of discovery and personal narrative. His style is characterized by an intricate definition of surfaces, often using tiny, rhythmic marks to evoke a primal continuum of form and color. Verhagen’s contribution to Dutch art lies in his ability to weave the ornate, "Beardsley-esque" sensibilities of his youth into a softer, more humanistic portrayal of the modern world.


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