, painted in 1871, just after the National Gallery acquired the Hobbema Nearly a century after being painted it was still on the island, in a collection in nearby
Sommelsdijk, suggesting it had been commissioned by a local patron. After the death of the collector in 1782 it was bought by the Middelharnis council, and hung in the town hall until 1822. It was then exchanged with an obscure painter for a copy and another landscape painting, both by him. It then moved through the art trade, increasing rapidly in price, and reached
Edinburgh in
Scotland in 1826. Hobbema had been little appreciated and cheap in the 18th century, but his pictures were in tune with
Romantic and later 19th-century taste, and prices rose accordingly through the 19th century. In 1829 it was auctioned in Edinburgh for 195
guineas, already a good price, then taken to London and cleaned. It then fetched £800, and by 1834 was in the collection of
Sir Robert Peel, 2nd Baronet, who had a significant collection of Dutch paintings, but is better known for having twice been
Prime Minister of the United Kingdom in 1834–1835 and 1841–1846. It was exhibited at the
British Institution in 1835, and in March 1871 entered the National Gallery as NG 830 when they bought seventy-seven pictures and eighteen drawings from the Peel Collection. These were bought from Peel's son
Robert, the 3rd Baronet for £75,000, with a special grant from the government, and catalogued as NG 818 to 894.
The Avenue, Sydenham by
Camille Pissarro was painted during a stay in London that ended in June 1871, a month after the National Gallery acquired the Hobbema, and its composition is probably influenced by it. Pissarro was then living in the London village, turning into a suburb, of
Upper Norwood, next to
Sydenham, avoiding the
Franco-Prussian War. This painting is also now in the National Gallery. ==Notes==