Object data
pen and grey and black ink, with watercolour, over preliminary indications, squaring and orthogonals in graphite; framing line in grey ink
height 389 mm × width 505 mm
Dirk Maas
The Hague, Haarlem, 1695
pen and grey and black ink, with watercolour, over preliminary indications, squaring and orthogonals in graphite; framing line in grey ink
height 389 mm × width 505 mm
inscribed on verso, in pencil: centre, in a nineteenth-century hand, Fr. Muller 2936; lower centre, by museum staff, in a nineteenth-century hand, A 2864 (changed to 3025); lower right, in a nineteenth-century hand, Dirk Maes
stamped on verso: lower centre, with the mark of the museum (L. 2228)
watermark: Strasbourg bend, with the letters AJ; countermark with letters T I (?); similar to Heawood, no. 155 (London: 1690)
Two vertical folds in centre
...; collection Karel Jan Frederik Cornelis Kneppelhout van Sterkenburg (1818-85), Lord van Sterkenburg en Hoekenburg Driebergen, Kasteel Sterkenburg, near Driebergen, and Utrecht;1 ? his son, Cornelis Johannes Kneppelhout van Sterkenburg (1856-1938), Kasteel Sterkenburg; ...; from F. Muller, April 1894, with 8 other drawings (inv. nos. RP-T-1894-A-3024 and RP-T-1894-A-3026 to RP-T-1894-A-3032), fl. 140 for all, to the museum (L. 2228)
Object number: RP-T-1894-A-3025
Copyright: Public domain
Dirk Maas (Haarlem 1656 - Haarlem 1717)
He was born on 12 September 1656 in Haarlem and was baptized two days later.2 He was the oldest son of the Hoorn merchant Carel Dircksz Maas (?-1708) and of his second wife, Geertruyda van Vaerle (?-1674), both well-to-do members of the Protestant Church.3 His uncle Johannes Dircksz Maas (1629-1699) also worked as a painter in Haarlem from 1659 until his death. Another painter in Dirk’s family was his cousin Jan Pietersz Maas (1655-1690), also active in Haarlem.
According to Houbraken, Dirk Maas was taught by Hendrick Mommers (1619/20-1693) and Nicolaes Berchem (1621/22-1683).4 On 8 November 1678, Maas became a member of the Haarlem Guild of St Luke, three years after the date of his earliest known work, Cavalry Encounter (1675), now in the State Hermitage Museum, St Petersburg (inv. no. ??-2427). He served as warden of the Haarlem guild at some point, though the exact date is unknown owing to the loss of records. On 10 October 1681, while still living in his parents’ house on the Grote Markt, he joined the city’s Dutch Reformed Church.5
In 1690, Maas travelled to England as part of the entourage of Stadholder-King William III (1650-1702) and was an eye witness at the Battle of the Boyne (1 July 1690), when William’s troops defeated those of Catholic King James II (1633-1701). Maas commemorated the victory with a drawn panoramic view of the battle, preserved in the British Royal Collection at Windsor Castle (RCIN 916607).6 This drawing he used as the basis for a large etching (e.g. inv. no. RP-P-OB-82.799)7 and at least two paintings, one commissioned by Hans William Bentinck (1649-1907), 1st Earl of Portland, still in this family’s collection at Welbeck Abbey, Nottinghamshire (inv. no. 523),8 the other in the collection of the National Trust at Petworth House, West Sussex (inv. no. 117).9
Dirk was back in Haarlem in 1692. On 6 July 1694, he married his full cousin, his mother’s niece Aletta van Vaerle (Varelen) (?-?) in the Walloon Church. Of their seven children, five died prematurely. Dirk must have had considerable financial means, for he bought houses and plots in the years following his marriage.
After Maas’s return to Holland, William III remained his most prominent patron, as he had been before the trip to England. In 1693, Maas painted a Boar Hunt for the Stadholder-King’s palace of Het Loo, Apeldoorn (inv. no. 271),10 and probably also the unsigned, undated Deer Hunt in that collection (inv. no. 242). The same year, he collaborated with Johannes Glauber (1646-c. 1726) and Albert Meyering (1645-1714) in the decoration of the palace of Soestdijk. Maas’s activities for the court at The Hague probably account for his joining the local painters’ guild, Confrerie Pictura, in 1697, even though he remained a resident of Haarlem.
Maas occasionally appraised paintings, and he is recorded as having had business transactions with the painters Cornelis Dusart (1660-1704) and Jan van der Meer II (1656-1705). In 1709 he carried out restoration work on a militia painting by Dirk Hals (1591-1656), and he added staffage to the paintings by Johannes Glauber, Gerrit Berckheyde (1638-1698) and Adriaen Oudendijck (1677-1704).
Like fellow Mommers pupil Jan van Huchtenburg (1647-1733), with whom he was friends, Dirk Maas specialized in equestrian subjects in the manner of Philips Wouwerman (1619-1668), producing riding schools, hunting and battle scenes, in paintings, drawings and etchings. There are also few still-lifes signed by the artist.
At the age of sixty-one, Dirk died on 25 December 1717 in Haarlem and was buried on 30 December in the Grote or Sint Bavo Kerk.11 His estate was sold on 25 April 1718 by Isaac Vincentsz van der Vinne (1665-1740). His only known pupil was Willem Hugaerts (1683-1727).12
Annemarie Stefes, 2019
References
A. Houbraken, De groote schouburgh der Nederlantsche konstschilders en schilderessen, 3 vols., Amsterdam 1718-21, III (1721), p. 362; A. van der Willigen, Geschiedkundige aantekeningen over Haarlemsche schilders, Haarlem 1866, p. 154; J.P. van der Kellen, Le Peintre graveur hollandais et flamand [des XVIe et XVIIe siècles] ou catalogue raisonné des estampes gravées par les peintres de l’école hollandaise et flamande: Ouvrage faisant suite au peintre-graveur de Bartsch, Utrecht 1866, p. 163; A. van der Willigen, Les Artistes de Harlem: Notices historiques avec un précis sur la Gilde de St. Luc, Haarlem/The Hague 1870, p. 205; A. von Wurzbach, Niederländisches Künstlerlexikon, 3 vols., Vienna/Leipzig 1906-11, II (1910), pp. 87-88; U. Thieme and F. Becker, Allgemeines Lexikon der bildenden Künstler: Von der Antike bis zur Gegenwart, 37 vols., Leipzig 1907-50, XXIII (1929), pp. 544-45 (entry by M.D. Henkel); F.W.H. Hollstein et al., Dutch and Flemish Etchings, Engravings and Woodcuts, c. 1450-1700, 72 vols., Amsterdam and elsewhere 1947-2010, XI (1954), pp. 149-52; H. Miedema, De archiefbescheiden van het St. Lukasgilde te Haarlem, 1497-1789, 2 vols., Alphen aan den Rijn 1980, I, p. 334, II, pp. 680, 933, 941, 1034, 1067; A. Stefes, Nicolaes Pietersz. Berchem: Die Zeichnungen, 3 vols., Bern 1997 (PhD diss., Universität Bern), I, pp. 9, 91-95; III, pp. 451-57; E. Buijsen (ed.), Haagse schilders in de Gouden Eeuw. Het Hoogsteder Lexicon van alle schilders werkzaam in Den Haag, 1600-1700, Zwolle 1998, p. 326; A. van der Willigen and F.G. Meijer, A Dictionary of Dutch and Flemish Still-life Painters Working in Oils, 1525-1725, Leiden 2003, p. 136; P. Biesboer and N. Köhler (eds.), Painting in Haarlem, 1500-1850: The Collection of the Frans Hals Museum, coll. cat. Haarlem 2006, pp. 226-28 (entry by I. van Thiel-Stroman); P. Groenendijk, Beknopt biografisch lexicon van Zuid- en Noord-Nederlandse schilders, graveurs, glasschilders, tapijtwevers et cetera van ca. 1350 tot ca. 1720, Utrecht 2008, p. 508; A. Beyer et al. (eds.), Allgemeines Künstlerlexikon: Die bildenden Künstler aller Zeiten und Völker, Munich 1992-, LXXXVI (2015), p. 85 (entry by P. Biesboer)
The second Siege of Namur – which took place in the summer of 1695 and which is the subject of the present sheet as well as three other drawings in the collection with the same provenance, inv. nos. RP-T-1894-A-3024, RP-T-1894-A-3026 and RP-T-1894-A-3027 – was the decisive event in the Nine-Years’ War (1688-97) between France and the so-called Grand Alliance, a European coalition of the Holy Roman Empire (led by Austria), the Dutch Republic, Spain, England and the House of Savoy. It changed the course of events in favour of the Alliance.
Situated at the strategically important junction of the rivers Maas and Sambre, Namur (then part of the Spanish Netherlands) had been captured by French troops under the Marquis de Vauban (1633-1707) during the first Siege of Namur in 1692. Three years later, the Dutch Stadtholder-King William III (1650-1702), together with the Electors of Bavaria and Brandenburg, reconquered the town. The siege began on 9 June 1695 and two months later, on 6 August, the city surrendered. It was not, however, until 1 September that the citadel, seen here at centre right atop a steep cliff and considered impregnable, capitulated.13 Namur, the object of propaganda by both sides, became a symbol of William III’s most important military victory, extensively reported in newspapers and pamphlets and represented in paintings, drawings and prints.14
The present bird’s-eye view shows the city and its citadel from the west. At lower right is the Pont de Jambes, an arched stone bridge over the River Maas, the northernmost section of which had been destroyed by the French. The party responsible for the damage is documented in the extensive legend), on a large map of the Siege of Namur from 1695 (e.g. inv. no. RP-P-AO-19-83, etched by Gilliam van der Gouwen (?-1720/40) and Daniël Stopendaal (1672-1726) after a drawing by Ottmar Elliger II (1666-1732) and published by Nicolaes Visscher III (1649-1702). The caption for the bridge detail reads: ‘Maas Brug van zeven steene bogen, waar van de Francen de voorste houte Brug hadden afgebroken’ (‘Maas Bridge of seven stone arches, of which the French broke up the front wooden bridge’). Billowing clouds of smoke near that bridge signal the enemy fire of the French cannons, as we also know from the same 1695 map, which carefully records the disposition of the troops during the battle. In the left foreground is the fort called ‘Maison de Diable’ and to the right the fort named after the famous military engineer Menno van Coehoorn (1641-1704) who built it before 1692. The names of these two forts – which can be seen on the distant mountain ridge of inv. no. RP-T-1894-A-3024 – are recorded in the legend of another map of the 1695 siege, this one etched by Daniel Bongaert (active c. 1770) (e.g. inv. no. RP-P-1878-A-588). In the far distance of the present composition is the ring of camps belonging to the English and Dutch armies of William III.
None of the Rijksmuseum’s four drawings of the Siege of Namur is signed, but they all bear nineteenth-century inscriptions crediting Dirk Maas as their author. Two are enhanced with watercolour; the other two rendered in a slightly different, bolder monochromatic style. Maas is traditionally considered to have been responsible for several other drawings of Namur during the siege, comparable in size and format, such as those in the Musée d’Art et d’Histoire, Geneva (inv. nos. Maa.1 and Maa.2);15 the Musée de Groesbeeck-de Croix, Namur (inv. nos. K6 and 11/7); and the Musée Provincial des Arts Anciens du Namurois, Namur (Collection SAN, inv. no. unknown).16
Maas could have well witnessed the Siege of Namur first hand, especially since he had already served as battle artist to William III in England in 1690. Yet it is unlikely that the Rijksmuseum drawings of Namur were made in situ; instead they are probably carried out later, on the basis of now lost sketches, once back in the artist’s studio in either The Hague or Haarlem. The focus is on the accurate record of topographical details. The present sheet and the other watercolour (inv. no. RP-T-1894-A-3024), were first laid in in graphite over an extensive network of squaring and orthogonal lines (in this case, leading to a vanishing point on top of the distant mountain ridge between the two forts), suggesting that the composition was transferred from another support and carefully redrawn mechanically. In a second step, the contours were fixed in pen and brown ink, sometimes deviating from the underlying graphite sketch, as can be best seen in the bulwark along the Maas. Finally, to create a finished composition, subtle layers of watercolour washes were added. Such a workshop scenario might also explain the fact that all four drawings are executed on English paper, perhaps brought back by the artist from his trip to England in 1690.
Originally, the museum’s holdings of drawn views of Namur under siege contained five additional sheets with the same provenance, which can no longer be found (inv. nos. RP-T-1894-A-3028 to RP-T-1894-A-3032).17
Annemarie Stefes, 2019
F. Muller, De Nederlandsche geschiedenis in platen. Beredeneerde beschrijving van Nederlandsche historieplaten, zinneprenten en historische kaarten, 4 vols., Amsterdam 1863-82, I (1863-70), p. 448, no. 2936; U. Thieme and F. Becker, Allgemeines Lexikon der bildenden Künstler: Von der Antike bis zur Gegenwart, 37 vols., Leipzig 1907-50, XXIII (1929), p. 545 (entry by M.D. Henkel)
A. Stefes, 2019, 'Dirk Maas, View of Namur from the West during the Siege of 1695, The Hague, 1695', in J. Turner (ed.), Dutch Drawings of the Seventeenth Century in the Rijksmuseum, online coll. cat. Amsterdam: hdl.handle.net/10934/RM0001.COLLECT.64556
(accessed 13 November 2024 07:05:43).