New Edition of Jordaens Van Dyck Journal
April 7 2022

Picture: JVDPPP
Posted by Adam Busiakiewicz:
The third edition of the Jordaens Van Dyck Journal has just been published online. As always, the journal is free to access online and printed editions can be ordered through the website.
Here's a list of articles featured within:
Justin Davies & Ingrid Moortgat: The punch mark VHB : possible identification as the panel maker’s mark of Hans van Beemen alias Hans van Herentals (died 1624)
Justin Davies: Evidence of a previously unknown set of Van Dyck’s Apostles in Schloss Woyanow, Danzig in the early Twentieth century and an examination of one of the panels
Andrea Seim: Planks from the same oak tree found in different paintings
Justin Davies: Art historical considerations on same tree planks found in different paintings
Joost Vander Auwera: Jacques Jordaens, his panels and panel makers: identifications and patterns
Justin Davies: Van Dyck’s Apostles: introduction, overview and a new document Johannes Edvardsson: Dendrochronological and panel mark results from the Besançon and Konstanjevica na Krki Van Dyck related Apostles
Alexis Merle Du Bourg: The provenance of the sets of contemporary panels of Van Dyck’s Apostles in Besançon and Konstanjevica na Krki
Ingrid Goddeeris: Identifying new avenues for nineteenth-century provenance research through a focus on the Belgian art dealer Léon Gauchez using online museum files and digitised journals
James Innes-Mulraine: To Land upp into the Garden there’: Van Dyck’s lost London studio found at last
In a related note, James Innes-Mulraine's appeared in The Sunday Telegraph last weekend regarding a petition to have a blue plaque placed on the site of Van Dyck's former studio in Blackfriars.
Here's what the site looked like in the past:
Picture: Trustees of the British Museum
And here is what the area looks like now:
Picture:(c) ZC Innes-Mulraine
A worthy project that AHN lends its full support to!