# Joos Vincent de Vos artist context and auction value notes

Canonical page: https://appraisily.com/artist/joos-vincent-de-vos/
Profile generated: 2026-05-30T14:29:10.000Z
Quality: high confidence, strong sources

## Artist identity

- Birth date: 1829-03-04
- Death date: 1875-10-05
- Nationality: Belgian
- Common media: oil painting

## About Joos Vincent de Vos

Joos Vincent de Vos (1829–1875), also recorded as Joost Vincent de Vos, was a Belgian painter born and based in Kortrijk, West Flanders. He specialized in animal painting, producing scenes featuring monkeys, dogs, and cats with a particular emphasis on singeries—compositions in which monkeys parody human activities as satirical commentary. This singerie tradition had deep roots in Flemish and French art, and de Vos brought it into a mid-nineteenth-century Belgian context with detailed, often humorous narrative compositions. His work is documented in major reference publications including Bénézit's critical dictionary and the Witt Checklist of painters. Active during a period when the Belgian animalier genre enjoyed considerable popularity, de Vos produced a substantial body of work—nearly two hundred lots are recorded in auction databases—making his paintings a recurring presence in the European Old Master and nineteenth-century picture market.

## Common works and media

De Vos worked primarily in oil on canvas and oil on panel. His most characteristic works are small to medium-scale animal genre scenes, especially singeries depicting monkeys dressed and behaving as humans in domestic or social settings. He also painted straightforward compositions of dogs, cats, and other domestic animals. These works are typically tightly rendered, narrative in character, and often humorous or allegorical in tone.

## Market and appraisal context

Paintings by de Vos appear periodically at auction, typically within Old Master and nineteenth-century European picture sales. Singerie subjects—monkeys enacting human scenes—generally attract the strongest collector interest. Appraisal value depends on condition, the clarity of the signature or attribution, provenance documentation, compositional complexity, and size. Works are not especially scarce, but well-preserved monkey scenes in good condition can draw competitive bidding. Attribution should be verified carefully, since animal paintings from the mid-nineteenth-century Belgian school are occasionally reattributed among contemporaneous painters. No dedicated catalogue raisonné is known, which limits definitive authentication.

## Appraisily data basis

Appraisily artist pages combine identity research from authority files and museum sources—including RKD, Getty ULAN, and VIAF—with public auction records, sale dates, realized prices, and comparable lot information when those records are available. For Joos Vincent de Vos, biographical data is well-supported by multiple independent authority sources; market context is drawn from auction-database signals and should be supplemented by professional appraisal for individual works.

## Sources

- RKD – Netherlands Institute for Art History: https://rkd.nl/en/explore/artists/21104
- Getty Vocabulary Program: https://vocab.getty.edu/page/ulan/500017194
- VIAF: https://viaf.org/viaf/95786723/
- Wikidata: https://www.wikidata.org/wiki/Q6276088
- Wikipedia: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vincent_De_Vos
