Object data
oak
height 120 cm × width 42 cm × depth 29 cm
Henrik Douverman
Cleves, c. 1510 - c. 1515
oak
height 120 cm × width 42 cm × depth 29 cm
Carved and originally polychromed. The top of Mary’s head has been narrowed to accommodate the missing crown. Holes for attaching a now lost necklace are visible on either side between the neck and hair. The Christ Child’s arms were carved separately and attached with wooden pegs. The reverse has been hollowed out with a wide gouge.
A. Truyen in B. Rommé et al., Gegen den Strom: Meisterwerke niederrheinischer Skulptur in Zeiten der Reformation 1500-1550, exh. cat. Aachen (Suermondt-Ludwig-Museum) 1996, pp. 203-04
The underside has suffered some woodworm infestation. The bottom section of the sculpture with Mary’s feet is missing, as are her crown and necklace; also missing are the Christ Child’s right arm, left hand and feet. Most of the dehydration cracks have been filled with wood wedges, perhaps prior to or during the sculpture’s carving. The crack in Mary’s face has been recently filled with wood. All of the polychromy has been removed with a caustic.
…; on loan from the Museum van Reproducties van Beeldhouwkunst, Koninklijke Academie van Beeldende Kunsten, The Hague, since 28 February 1956; on loan to the Museum Kurhaus, Cleves, since 2004
Object number: BK-BR-534
Credit line: On loan from the Koninklijke Academie van Beeldende Kunsten, Hogeschool der Kunsten Den Haag
Copyright: Public domain
Henrik Douverman (? Dinslaken c. 1490 - Kalkar 1543/44)
In the nineteenth century, the maker of the well-known Retable of the Seven Sorrows of Mary in the Sankt-Nicolaikirche at Kalkar was identified by Wolff as Henrik Douverman (or He(i)nrick/h Douwermann), whose name he discovered in the city’s archives. Today he is considered to be the leading woodcarver of his day in the Lower Rhine region, with an ever-growing number of works attributed to his oeuvre.
Not much is known about Douverman’s early life, though some have traced his origin to Dinslaken (Germany), where a canon by the name of Johann Douverman resided, who was possibly his brother.1 Henrik was trained in Cleves in the workshop of the sculptor Dries Holthuys (active c. 1480-1510), alongside Henrick van Holt (c. 1480/90-1545/46), who would later become his competition. Douverman completed his apprenticeship around 1506. He is believed to have spent part of his Wanderjahre as a journeyman in Ulm, as a degree of stylistic influence from sculpture produced in that South-German city has been detected in his works.2 Certain, however, is that by 1510 he had returned to Cleves as affirmed by the frequent appearance of his name in local archival documents from that time onward. In subsequent years, he established a workshop and married. Douverman’s presence in Cleves is documented in debt records up until 1515. In 1517, he registered as a new citizen in Kalkar.
From 1518 to 1521, Douverman worked on his magnum opus, the Retable of the Seven Sorrows of Mary for the Nicolaikirche in Kalkar. In 1528, he was paid to repair and modify the massive Marianum in the same church.3 Another documented work is the Marian Altar for the former collegiate church of Cleves from 1513, though it appears Douverman abandoned this work due to a conflict of interest with his patrons, leaving the completion of the altar to the workshop of his former master, Dries Holthuys.4 In the end, it appears that Douverman was responsible only for the conception of the altar’s design and several of the earliest carvings.
Outside these specific commissions, Douverman’s name is documented nowhere up until his death in 1543/44, prompting speculation with respect to his social position. Other sculptors, including Arnt van Tricht (active c. 1530-d. 1570) – a pupil of Douverman – and Henrick van Holt, are known to have received numerous commissions from churches in the prosperous city of Xanten. Douverman appears to have experienced difficulty in securing work and may have abandoned his métier altogether as a woodcarver.5 Whatever the reason for his absence in the archives, a vast number of works have been attributed to Douverman, including works datable to the final years of his life, e.g. a Virgin Enthroned in Paris from circa 1540.6 While a Bishop (BK-NM-11537) preserved in the Rijksmuseum is clearly an example of Douverman’s workshop production, two other groups in the museum’s collection are unquestionably autograph works: a Virgin and Child (BK-BR-534) of circa 1510-15 and a St Ursula (BK-1975-70) of circa 1520, with the latter closely resembling a number of the female figures in the Retable of the Seven Sorrows of Mary.
Marie Mundigler, 2024
References
H.L.M. Defoer, ‘Einige sculpturen in het Museum Catharijneconvent nader bekeken’, in B. Rommé (ed.), Der Niederrhein und die alten Niederlande: Kunst und Kultur im späten Mittelalter: Referate des Kolloquiums zur Ausstellung ‘Gegen den Strom: Meisterwerke niederrheinischer Bildschnitzkunst in Zeiten der Reformation (1500-1550)’, Bielefeld 1999, pp. 135-45; W. Halsema-Kubes, ‘Een Ursula-beeld door Henrik Douvermann’, Bulletin van het Rijksmuseum 23 (1975), pp. 63-66; B. Rommé, Henrick Douwerman und die niederrheinische Bildschnitzkunst an der Wende zur Neuzeit, Bielefeld 1997, pp. 20-28; B. Rommé, Gegen den Strom: Meisterwerke niederrheinischer Skulptur in Zeiten der Reformation 1500-1550, exh. cat. Aachen (Suermondt-Ludwig-Museum) 1996, pp. 15-37; B. Rommé, ‘Der Marienleuchter in St. Nickolai’, in B. Rommé (ed.), Der Niederrhein und die alten Niederlande: Kunst und Kultur im späten Mittelalter, Bielefeld 1999, pp. 68-97; U. Thieme and F. Becker, Allgemeines Lexicon der bildenden Künstler von der Antike bis zur Gegenwart, vol. 9, Leipzig 1913, pp. 520-22; M. van Vlierden et al., Hout- en steensculptuur van Museum Catharijneconvent, ca. 1200-1600, coll. cat. Utrecht 2004, pp. 300-05; G. de Werd, Die St. Nicolaikirche in Kalkar, Munich/Berlin 2002, pp. 93-99, 110-13; De Werd in F. Scholten and G. de Werd, Een hogere werkelijkheid: Duitse en Franse beeldhouwkunst 1200-1600 uit het Rijksmuseum Amsterdam/Eine höhere Wirklichkeit, Deutsche und Französische Skulptur 1200-1600 aus dem Rijksmuseum Amsterdam, exh. cat. Cleves (Museum Kurhaus Kleve) 2004-06, nos. 12-14
The Virgin Mary holds the naked Christ Child in front of her with both hands. He lies on a thin folded cloth that follows the diagonal angle of his body. Mary gazes lovingly in his direction. Long waving locks of hair, originally flowing from the now missing crown, fall gracefully over her shoulders to the level of the elbows. Beneath her cloak, her dress is gathered together high above the waist by means of a knotted sash. The dress closes on the right; visible above the ‘V’-shaped neckline and the openings of the sleeves is a pleated, tightfitting chemise. Although a significant section of the sculpture has been sawn off at the bottom, an arching curve can still be discerned, most likely a depiction of the moon. Carvings of the Virgin standing on a moon formed the central figures of large hanging sculptural structures known as Mariana’7 The tenable presence of the moon in this Virgin and Child suggests this sculpture might also have had this function. A comparable sculpture of a Virgin and Child from a Marianum is today preserved in Huis Bergh Castle in ‘s-Heerenberg.8
In 1942, Leeuwenberg assembled a homogenous group of six wooden statues that he attributed to Dries Holthuys (active c. 1480-c. 1510), the sculptor responsible for the stone Madonna in Xanten Cathedral, carved in 1496. Leeuwenberg’s group included not only the present Virgin and Child, but also a St Christopher from the Sint-Maartenskerk in Oud-Zevenaar, a Virgin and Child and a St John from the collegiate church of Cleves, a Virgin Annunciate from Nijmegen and a Bust of St Anthony held in a private collection.9 While the interpretation of the six wooden images as a composite group received general acceptance, the link to the stone sculpture and the Holthuys attribution were rejected. In 1949, Timmers attributed the very same group to an anonymous woodcarver, whom he donned the ‘Master of Oud-Zevenaar’, a name of convenience derived from the known provenance of the St Christopher.10 Only in 1965 was a direct association established between the group in question and the works of Henrik Douverman, the most important sculptor along the Lower Rhine during the period in question.11 The attribution of these six works to Douverman’s oeuvre is today widely acknowledged, while Dries Holthuys’s oeuvre has also been more precisely defined.12
The Amsterdam sculpture is typically dated circa 1510-15, i.e. after the period of the works produced in Master Arnt’s youth but prior to his moving to Kalkar, where he commenced work on the Retable of the Seven Sorrows of Mary.13 Numerous stylistic points of agreement can be observed in other works produced during this period, including the sculpture of St John from the Stiftskirche Sankt-Mariae Himmelfahrt in Cleves, a Catherine in the Sankt-Aldegundiskirche in Emmerich and a Virgin of which the present whereabouts are unknown.14 The aforementioned sculpture of the Virgin and Child in Cleves, though certainly of an earlier date, bears the greatest similarity to the Amsterdam sculpture. Both Virgins hold the Christ Child at a diagonal angle, supporting his upper body with one hand and his legs with the other. The type of the diagonally reclining child is derived from Master Arnt’s Virgin of circa 1480, carved for the Sankt-Nicolaikirche in Kalkar.15
In the late fifteenth century, it was not uncommon for wooden sculptures to be left unpainted. This meant not only a reduction in the cost, but it also reflected the growing appreciation for the virtuosity of the woodcarving. Without polychrome finishing, this became vastly more important, as did the intrinsic qualities of wood as a material. This development occurred primarily in southern Germany, where sculptors worked in limewood. Douverman was one of the first Lower Rhenish woodcarvers to apply this Holzsichtigkeit to oak, albeit on the condition that the wood itself contained no visible knots, splits or other forms of damage. He nevertheless continued to produce both statues carved with the intention of being polychromed as well as images designed to remain Holzsichtig.16 For the present Virgin and Child, wood of inferior quality was used. This indicates the sculpture’s surface was probably originally polychromed, with irregularities such as knots and cracks concealed. Following the removal of the sculpture’s polychromy with a caustic in the nineteenth century, likely motivated by preferences of taste, these wood blemishes resurfaced.
Guido de Werd, 2004 (updated by Bieke van der Mark, 2024)
This entry was originally published in F. Scholten and G. de Werd, Een hogere werkelijkheid: Duitse en Franse beeldhouwkunst 1200-1600 uit het Rijksmuseum Amsterdam/Eine höhere Wirklichkeit, Deutsche und Französische Skulptur 1200-1600 aus dem Rijksmuseum Amsterdam, exh. cat. Cleves (Museum Kurhaus Kleve) 2004-06, no. 12
J. Leeuwenberg with the assistance of W. Halsema-Kubes, Beeldhouwkunst in het Rijksmuseum, coll. cat. Amsterdam 1973, no. 118, with earlier literature; B. Rommé et al., Gegen den Strom: Meisterwerke niederrheinischer Skulptur in Zeiten der Reformation 1500-1550, exh. cat. Aachen (Suermondt-Ludwig-Museum) 1996, no. 23; B. Rommé, Henrick Douwerman und die niederrheinische Bildschnitzkunst an der Wende zur Neuzeit, Bielefeld 1997, pp. 310-11, Werkkatalog II, no. 9; H. van Os et al., Netherlandish art in the Rijksmuseum 1400-1600, coll. cat. Amsterdam 2000, p. 106; L. Kargère, ‘The Kalkar School of Carving: Attribution of a Wooden Polychromed Sculpture’, _Metropolitan Museum Journal _35 (2000), pp. 121-35, esp. p. 126; R. Karrenbrock et al., _Dries Holthuys: Ein Meister des Mittelalters aus Kleve _(Schriftenreihe Museum Kurhaus Kleve: Ewald Mataré-Sammlung, 16), exh. cat. Cleves (Museum Kurhaus Kleve) 2002, pp. 15-17; De Werd in F. Scholten and G. de Werd, Een hogere werkelijkheid: Duitse en Franse beeldhouwkunst 1200-1600 uit het Rijksmuseum Amsterdam/Eine höhere Wirklichkeit, Deutsche und Französische Skulptur 1200-1600 aus dem Rijksmuseum Amsterdam, exh. cat. Cleves (Museum Kurhaus Kleve) 2004-06, no. 12
G. de Werd/ B. van der Mark, 2024, 'Hendrik Douverman, Virgin and Child, Cleves, c. 1510 - c. 1515', in F. Scholten and B. van der Mark (eds.), European Sculpture in the Rijksmuseum, online coll. cat. Amsterdam: hdl.handle.net/10934/RM0001.COLLECT.24393
(accessed 27 November 2024 07:44:50).