Object data
ivory
height 10.5 cm × width 8.2 cm × thickness 1.4 cm
anonymous
Netherlands, c. 1735 - c. 1750
ivory
height 10.5 cm × width 8.2 cm × thickness 1.4 cm
Carved in relief.
With 19th-century wooden frame (NG-NM-4200-B).
…; collection J. Farncombe Sanders, Breda; by whom donated to the Nederlandsch Museum voor Geschiedenis en Kunst, The Hague, 1878; transferred to the museum, 1885
Object number: NG-NM-4200
Credit line: Gift of J. Farncombe Sanders, Breda
Copyright: Public domain
The present ivory medallion shows Grand Pensionary Johan van Oldenbarnevelt, portrayed in profile, facing right, at approximately seventy years of age. He wears a fur-edged tabard over a buttoned doublet and a ruff collar around the neck. This portrait can be traced back to an engraving by Willem Jacobsz van Delff (RP-P-OB-77.368) dated 1617, made after a painting by his father-in-law, Michiel Jansz van Mierevelt (cf. SK-A-257), from 1616.
The medallion was bequeathed to the Rijksmuseum by J. Farncombe Sanders in 1878. In 1999, the museum acquired a comparable ivory portrait of Hugo Grotius (NG-1999-3), likewise based on a print by Van Delff after a painting by Van Mierevelt. Both were very likely carved by the same hand responsible for two ivory portrait medallions of the De Witt brothers in the museum’s collection (BK-18760-A and -B). All four medallions share the same dimensions, with the somewhat smoother polishing of the Grotius portrait being the only noteworthy distinction.
The De Witt brothers, Van Oldenbarnevelt and Grotius were all members of the Dutch States Party, the anti-Orangist faction existing in the seventeenth-century Dutch Republic. Grotius managed to escape from Loevestein Castle, then functioning as the state prison, on 22 March 1621. By contrast, the other three men would meet a violent end: Van Oldenbarnevelt was convicted of high treason in a mock trial held on 12 May 1619 and beheaded one day later; the De Witt brothers were lynched on 20 August 1672 by a mob of vengeful Orangists. Portraits of these ‘martyrs of the State’ were collected by those sympathetic to the republican cause, occasionally as part of a series. 1 During the so-called Patriottentijd (Time of the Patriots, 1780-95), the veneration of these men experienced a revival. In the 1780s, Van Oldenbarnevelt, Grotius and the De Witt brothers were inducted in a pantheon of ‘Heroes of the Dutch States Party’, which took the form of small busts cast in Loosdrecht porcelain.2
Nevertheless, the four ivory portrait medallions in the Rijksmuseum were all very likely produced quite some time before the 1780s. The style of their execution betrays some similarity to a number of ivory portrait medallions linked to the Flemish (?) sculptor Gaspar van der Hagen (d. 1769), an artist probably to be identified as the Monogrammist GVDR.3 General parallels can be observed in the onset and rendering of the hair, the broad noses, and the large eyes with emphatically delineated eyelids found on a set of three ivory-carved oval portrait medallions of John Milton, Queen Elizabeth I and Oliver Cromwell in the Victoria and Albert Museum,4 and an ivory medallion in the Reiner Winkler Collection, possibly a portrait of King-Stadholder Willem III.5 As an assistant to the native Antwerp sculptor Michael Rysbrack (1694-1770) (cf. BK-NM-5760 and BK-2018-9) in London from 1744 on, Van der Hagen sculpted in marble. In his autonomous work, however, he appears to have specialized in oval portrait medallions of historical figures carved in ivory, frequently based on three-dimensional models by Rysbrack. By comparison with Van der Hagen’s carvings, the four Amsterdam ivories lack the refinement and the ‘fleshiness’ in the faces of most of the works attributed to Van der Hagen. The carving is less skilled and rather stiff. This raises the question: are the medallions perhaps early works by Van der Hagen, made in the Low Countries prior to his departure for London? In any case, acknowledging the stylistic parallels to the signed work of this sculptor and his master, Rysbrack, the Southern Netherlands (Antwerp?) – where a long and rich ivory carving tradition existed, surpassing that of the Dutch Republic – emerges as a conceivable place where their maker was trained.
Bieke van der Mark, 2025
J. Leeuwenberg with the assistance of W. Halsema-Kubes, Beeldhouwkunst in het Rijksmuseum, coll. cat. Amsterdam 1973, no. 264, with earlier literature; ‘Keuze uit de aanwinsten’, Bulletin van het Rijksmuseum 47 (1999), pp. 214-43, esp. p. 215
B. van der Mark, 2025, 'anonymous, Portrait Medallion of Johan van Oldenbarnevelt (1547-1619), Netherlands, c. 1735 - c. 1750', in F. Scholten and B. van der Mark (eds.), European Sculpture in the Rijksmuseum, online coll. cat. Amsterdam: https://data.rijksmuseum.nl/20035668
(accessed 10 December 2025 23:49:45).