Object data
black chalk, with grey and reddish-brown wash; framing line in black chalk (trimmed on left border)
height 286 mm × width 187 mm
Jan Worst
? Rome, c. 1647 - c. 1650
black chalk, with grey and reddish-brown wash; framing line in black chalk (trimmed on left border)
height 286 mm × width 187 mm
inscribed on verso: lower left (partially masked), in pencil, 16 (?); lower right, in an old (possibly seventeenth-century) hand, in black chalk, J. Worst
stamped on verso: lower left, with the mark of the museum (L. 2228)
Watermark: Countermark with letters, PP (the second letter in reverse)
Some small oily stains
…; from the dealer F. Muller, Amsterdam, fl. 10, to the museum (L. 2228), 1884
Object number: RP-T-1884-A-388
Copyright: Public domain
Jan Worst (active c. 1645-1660)
As Houbraken reported, he was a painter of Italianate landscapes and close friend of Johannes Lingelbach (1622-1674), with whom he was in Rome. Since Lingelbach travelled in 1644 to Italy, where he is recorded from 1647 to 1650, this provides a clue for the date of Worst’s stay in the south. Like most of his compatriots, Worst chose the route through France on his way back to the Netherlands, spending at least several months in the area of Lyon. This is confirmed by autograph inscriptions naming French sites on two drawings, one in Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen, Rotterdam, the View in Vienne, Looking South toward the Bridge over the Rhône and the Tour de Valois, which is dated 19 July 1655 (inv. no. JWORST 2),1 and another, whose current whereabouts are unknown, the Old Castle and a Chapel on the Bank of a River, which bears a date of 20 January 1656.2 The Rijksprentenkabinet’s inv. no. RP-T-1954-156 is dated the same day as the Rotterdam drawing and although the site is not specified, we know from the subject-matter that it, too, was drawn near Vienne. Worst apparently made panoramic landscapes together with Frederik de Moucheron (1633-1686), who not only worked in a similar style but also sometimes depicted the same views.3
Although Worst must also have been active as a painter, to date only drawings by him are known. This evidently was already the case in the early eighteenth century, when Houbraken stated that ‘one seldom sees his paintings, since he spent most of his time drawing on paper, which drawings were held in high esteem by the connoisseurs’.4 In the 1660s, probably after his return to the Netherlands, Worst also drew studio versions of his French landscape drawings for the Atlas Van der Hem, a fifty-volume collection of topographical views assembled by Laurens van der Hem (1621-1678) and now preserved in the Österreichische Nationalbibliothek, Vienna.5 Although a drawing of a Landscape with Rocks in a River, near the Grande Chartreuse, in the Crocker Art Museum, Sacramento (inv. no. 1871,575), used to be regarded as his last known work from 16866, Schatborn now interprets the inscribed date as ‘1656’, which situates it in Worst’s French period.7
Annemarie Stefes, 2018
References
A. Houbraken, De groote schouburgh der Nederlantsche konstschilders en schilderessen, 3 vols., Amsterdam 1718-21, II (1719), p. 147; G. Jansen and G. Luijten, Italianisanten en bamboccianten. Het italianisierend landschap en genre door Nederlandse kunstenaars uit de zeventiende eeuw, exh. cat. Rotterdam (Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen) 1988, p. 119; D. Scrase and T. Vignau-Wilberg, Das goldene Jahrhundert: Holländische Meisterzeichnungen aus dem Fitzwilliam Museum Cambridge, exh. cat. Munich (Staatliche Graphische Sammlung)/Heidelberg (Kurpfälzisches Museum)/Braunschweig (Herzog Anton Ulrich-Museum)/Cambridge (Fitzwilliam Museum) 1995-96, under no. 48; P. Schatborn, with J. Verberne, Drawn to Warmth: 17th-century Dutch Artists in Italy, exh. cat. Amsterdam (Rijksmuseum) 2001, pp. 128-31; S. Alsteens and H. Buijs, Paysages de France dessinés par Lambert Doomer et les artistes hollandais et flamands des XVIe et XVIIe siècles, Paris 2008, pp. 199, 203-9, 301-6; P. Schatborn, ‘Two Drawings of Tivoli by Jan Worst’, Master Drawings 53 (2015), no. 4, pp. 467-70; P. Schatborn, ‘Drawings by Jan Worst’, Master Drawings 58 (2020), no. 1, pp. 29-78
The Colosseum in Rome, one of the icons of ancient Roman architecture, is represented from the south-east, a popular viewpoint among seventeenth-century Dutch draughtsmen.8 Unlike inv. no. RP-T-1954-156, this sheet bears no autograph annotation by Jan Worst. Yet its traditional attribution to the artist, based on an inscription on the verso possibly in an old hand, should be taken seriously. Why else would such a little-known artist be mentioned as the drawing’s author?
Another drawing with an old attribution to Worst, done in a similar style, also using a reddish hue of brown ink, View of the Ruins of the Colosseum, Rome, is preserved in the Musée de Grenoble (inv. no. MG D 650).9 With their spiky structures and dashing brushwork, these two works differ from Worst’s rather disciplined and dryly executed French landscapes, such as inv. no. RP-T-1954-156, but nonetheless reveal several common features, such as the loop-like chalk contours used to render background vegetation.
Annemarie Stefes, 2018
De bouwvallen in en om Rome door Nederlandsche kunstenaars afgebeeld, exh. cat. Amsterdam (Rijksprentenkabinet) 1908, no. 130; J.Q. van Regteren Altena, Vereeuwigde Stad. Rome door Nederlanders getekend, 1500-1900, Amsterdam 1964, no. 74; L.C.J. Frerichs, Berchem en de Bentgenoten in Italië, exh. cat. Amsterdam (Rijksprentenkabinet) 1970, no. 75; M. Roethlisberger and C. Meyer, Dessins hollandais du Musée de Grenoble, coll. cat. Grenoble 1977, p. 35, under no. 53 (erroneously as in Frankfurt-am-Main); D. Scrase and T. Vignau-Wilberg, Das goldene Jahrhundert: Holländische Meisterzeichnungen aus dem Fitzwilliam Museum Cambridge, exh. cat. Munich (Staatliche Graphische Sammlung)/Heidelberg (Kurpfälzisches Museum)/Braunschweig (Herzog Anton Ulrich-Museum)/Cambridge (Fitzwilliam Museum) 1995-96, no. 48; L. Oehler, Rom in der Graphik des 16. bis 18. Jahrhunderts: Ein niederländischer Zeichnungsband der graphischen Sammlung Kassel und seiner Motive im Vergleich, Berlin 1997, p. 121; P. Schatborn, with J. Verberne, Drawn to Warmth: 17th-century Dutch Artists in Italy, exh. cat. Amsterdam (Rijksmuseum) 2001, p. 208 (n. 5); S. Alsteens and H. Buijs, Paysages de France dessinés par Lambert Doomer et les artistes hollandais et flamands des XVIe et XVIIe siècles, Paris 2008, pp. 301, 306 (n. 7); P. Schatborn, ‘Drawings by Jan Worst’, Master Drawings 58 (2020), no. 1, pp. 30, 32 (fig. 7), 43, 56, 68, no. 1
A. Stefes, 2018, 'Jan Worst, View of the Ruins of the Colosseum, Rome, with Two Seated Figures, Rome, c. 1647 - c. 1650', in Jane Turner (ed.), Dutch Drawings of the Seventeenth Century in the Rijksmuseum, online coll. cat. Amsterdam: hdl.handle.net/10934/RM0001.COLLECT.63907
(accessed 23 November 2024 17:37:39).