Object data
oil on canvas
support: height 201 cm × width 138 cm
outer size: depth 8 cm (support incl. frame)
Anthony van Dyck
1634 - c. 1635
oil on canvas
support: height 201 cm × width 138 cm
outer size: depth 8 cm (support incl. frame)
…; ? collection Edouard Peeters (1612-78), Antwerp;1 his eldest son, chevalier Michiel Peeters (1651-1729), (no. 40 of his estate inventory: ‘portret d’heer van der borght van dijck fl. 800’) and by division to Maria Theresia Barones van Nevelstein, née Peeters, 17 August 1729;2 collection Baron d’Everstijn, Antwerp, 1763;3 collection Jean-Egide [Emmanuel] Peeters (1725-86), Lord of Cleydael and Aertselaer, the son of Michiel Peeters’s second son, Michiel (1651-1729), who acquired the title Lord of Cleydael and Aertselaer from his father-in-law in 1747, by 1771;4 in whose collection seen by Sir Joshua Reynolds in 1781 (‘Three whole-lengths by Vandyck […] 2 men one of them with the [?] stairs and shipping’);5 his widow Mathilde van den Cruyce Peeters, Antwerp (1727-96);6 her son-in-law Henri Joseph Stier, Baron d’Aertselaer (1743-1821), husband of her daughter, Marie Louise Peeters (1748-1804); shipped with his collection to the United States, 1794, where exhibited at Bladensbury, Maryland, in April 1816 before being returned to Antwerp in June 1816;7 sale, Jean-Egide Peeters d’Aertselaer de Cleydael (1725-86, Antwerp), sold on the premises of the deceased’s son in law, Henri-Jospeh Stier, Antwerp (P. van Regenmortel and Sneyers), 27 August 1817, no. 4 (‘Ant. Vandyck Haut 6[7?], 1, large 4, 10 [174.7 [203.4?] x 140.7 cm] T. Portrait de François Vander Borght, aussi en pied et debout. Il est vêtu de noir avec un manteau espagnol. L’auteur l’a placé dans un riche vestibule donnant sur un port de mer rempli de navires, qu’on voit à gauche, et sur lequel, en l’indiquant, il semble appeller l’attention du spectateur. […] Gravé par Vermeulen.’), bought in at fl. 2,020, [in fact bought by H.-J. Stier];8 his [Stier] sale, sold on the deceased’s premises, Antwerp (C.J. Bincken), 29 July 1822, no. 5 (‘Ant.van Dyck h. 73 p. 4 l. L. 50 p. [pouces et lignes de France, 198 x 135 cm] T. Portrait en pied de François van der Borcht. Il est représenté dans une attitude noble et imposante, vêtu en noir avec un manteau espagnole. Le Peintre l’a placé dans un riche vestibule d’où l’on découvre un port de mer, sur lequel il semble appeller l’attention du spectateur’), fl. 1,000, to Jeronimo de Vries9 for Willem I, King of the Netherlands;10 Mauritshuis, The Hague, 1822; transferred to the museum, with SK-A-345 and SK-A-316, in an exchange valued at fl. 1,000, 182511
Object number: SK-A-101
Copyright: Public domain
Anthony van Dyck (Antwerp 1599 - London 1641)
Anthony van Dyck was baptized in the Onze-Lieve-Vrouwekerk, Antwerp, on 22 March 1599, the seventh child of a prosperous haberdasher. He died on 9 December 1641 in Blackfriars, London, and was buried two days later in Saint Paul’s Cathedral. By then he was internationally famous, and had to his credit an oeuvre of well over seven hundred paintings, consisting mostly in portraits, but also some highly esteemed sacred and profane figure subjects. He had outlived Peter Paul Rubens (1577-1640), who had greatly influenced him in his youth, by only some eighteen months, but he was to prove the more widely influential.
Enrolled as a pupil of Hendrik van Balen (1574/1575-1632) in 1609, he became a master in the Antwerp guild of St Luke nine years later before he was eighteen and a week before he received his majority – an event perhaps connected with this father’s financial difficulties which had begun in 1615 and ended with the sale of the family house in 1620, having caused strife in the family. In the meantime, Van Dyck had earlier entered Rubens’s studio, and had perhaps already operated unofficially as an artist working from a house in Antwerp called Den Dom van Ceulen. He was the only one of Rubens’s assistants to be named in the contract for the paintings for the Antwerp Jesuit Church signed on 22 March 1620.
There is no contemporary archival evidence for the existence of a studio functioning for Van Dyck before he left Antwerp for London and Rome. However, statements given in a lawsuit in Antwerp in 1660/1661 and the number of contemporary versions of some of Van Dyck’s works of that time would indicate at the least that there was a group of artists working in Van Dyck’s milieu, however informally.12
Van Dyck left Antwerp for London in October 1620; the purpose of his short visit – he was granted permission to leave at the end of the following February – is not known, but he received a payment from King James I (1566-1625) and was expected to return in eight months. He was recorded soon afterwards as living in Rome in the same house as George Gage (c. 1582-1632), an ‘Anglo-Catholic’ employed by the British crown to advance negotiations for the prince of Wales’s ‘Spanish match’ at the papal court.13
In Italy, Van Dyck was active in Rome, Venice, Genoa and Palermo.14 He re-established himself in 1627 in Antwerp, and was appointed court painter to the governor of the Spanish Netherlands, the Archduchess Isabella (1566-1633); his practice extended to The Hague whence he was summoned on two occasions.
By the summer of 1632, Van Dyck had settled in London; he was knighted by King Charles I (1600-1649) and then granted an annual pension as a retainer. But in the spring of 1634, he was in Antwerp and by the end of the year he was living in Brussels. By March 1635 he had returned to London and was established in a studio, specially converted by the architect Inigo Jones (1573-1652), on the Thames at Blackfriars. In great demand, not only by the king as a portrait painter, Van Dyck mixed with members of the court and married in 1640 Mary Ruthven, who was of a Scots noble family. In the autumn of 1640 he was in Antwerp, and early in 1641 briefly in Paris whence he returned hoping to gain the patronage of King Louis XIII (1601-1643) and Cardinal Richelieu (1585-1642). There in November, he wrote that he was very unwell; back in London with his wife for her lying-in, he died shortly after the birth of his daughter, Justiniana.
References
S.J. Barnes, N. de Poorter, O. Millar and H. Vey, Anthony van Dyck: A Complete Catalogue of the Paintings, New Haven (Conn.)/London 2004, pp. 1-12
The coat of arms in the present portrait was first transcribed in the 1872 museum catalogue, and identified as that of Nicolaes van der Borcht in the catalogue of 1893. As was recognized in the 1904 catalogue, the same coat of arms appears in another portrait (SK-A-725) which has also long been attributed to Anthony van Dyck. Although the sitter is identified in Cornelis Vermeulen’s (c. 1654-1708/1709) engraving (in reverse, of 1703) as Dominus Nicolaas vander Borcht,15 he was named as François in the museum catalogue of 1827 and then as Jacob, before Nicolaes was adopted.
Stols16 and Baetens17 record a Nicolaes van der Borcht, the son of Hendrik, whom Stols listed as a shipper and forwarding agent in Dunkirk circa 1607. According to Stols, the son’s similar business activity was based first in Calais and then circa 1626 in Lisbon, where he was declared bankrupt in 1631. Baetens states that by the 1640s he was (once again) a rich merchant trading in silk and broking insurance. In 1656 he was recorded as seventy years old.
However, Nicolaes is unlikely to be the sitter in this portrait, for the arms are those granted to his brother Adriaan in a letter patent of 2 March 1633 from Philip IV of Spain (1605-1665), in which Adriaan is described as Lord of Elverdinghe, Waesten and Spière and as resident in Cassel,18 all properties in West Flanders, Spière being less than twenty kilometres south of Dunkirk. Stols records that Adriaan had been a shipper and forwarding agent first in Malaga in 1615, then at Seville circa 1616-19, and in 1627 at Calais. Adriaan, who was born in Antwerp, was still alive in 1650 when he was created a knight. It remains a matter of conjecture as to why with the (incorrect) evidence of Vermeulen’s engraving, in the next recorded identification of the sitter – the 1817 sale catalogue – the sitter’s name was given as François. There are intermittent records of a François van der Borcht, and indeed a François van der Borcht married a niece of the second Michiel Peeters, through whose family the portrait descended (see Provenance). It was perhaps information provided from this source that led to the mistaken identification in the 1817 sale catalogue.
Vey’s scepticism notwithstanding, Glück’s identification of the town in the background as Dunkirk seems likely to be correct.19 The silhouetted profile agrees, though not exactly, with the view in Sanderus’s Flandria Illustrata of 1644.20 The tallest tower would be that of the Sint-Eloikerk; the Stadhuys tower is to the left, though improbably and inaccurately tall and thin; further to the left is the Jesuit Church and then the castle. The shore is correctly shown as made up of dunes and the channel, the harbour can be made out to the left. Until 11 October 1646, when it was captured by the French, Dunkirk was the home port of the naval army of Flanders (Armada de Flandes) in the war against the United Provinces, and also of many privateers similarly engaged against Dutch shipping.21
The 1960 museum catalogue first recognized that the view of Dunkirk was by a different hand from that of the portrait, perhaps that of Andries van Ertvelt (1590-1652). Such outside collaboration would have been unusual but not unique in Van Dyck’s practice (see SK-A-725). But as Van Ertvelt’s extant oeuvre is not extensive and his manner is not well defined, it seems best, granted the no more than workmanlike level of the handling, to describe the view as by an anonymous painter.
As far as the rest of the painting is concerned, Van Dyck’s authorship was doubted in the Rijksmuseum’s 1885 catalogue.22 But apart from criticizing the balustrade, Vey accepted the painting. However, judgement of the handling is not made easy by the discoloured varnish. The brushwork is best discernible in the face, and that indeed seems worthy of the artist. For the rest, the formulaic treatment of the hand,23 the only partially rendered collar, the feebly executed black costume (where legible), the dull folds of the drapery and the poorly executed coat of arms lack the vigour to be expected of a great artist or perhaps even of his studio working under his direct supervision.
A possible explanation for the differences in handling could be that Van Dyck had painted the head but left the rest unfinished when he departed for England in 1632 or in 1635 – and rather the latter year, if the date of the sitter’s patent of nobility is taken as a terminus post quem. An anonymous artist, cognizant of Van Dyck’s style, perhaps a former member of his Flemish studio, would then have completed the work, leaving the background to a specialist view painter. The balustrade would then have been introduced later by an incompetent artist with little understanding of perspective.
Glück24 recognized that the merchantman at anchor in the roads is flying a flag bearing the same coat of arms at her stern as is inscribed on the hanging above the sitter; the heraldic colours are correctly rendered. The ship flies a pennant from the spar of the main mast; at the fore, she flies the Dutch flag. The poop of the flute, also anchored (her sails are furled), firing a salute is decorated with a painted bas-relief (?) of a heron; at her stern she flies a blue and white striped flag edged with red.
The flags worn by the anchored merchantman require explanation; that at the stern is a house flag indicating that the ship was part of the Van der Borcht concern, and that at the fore – the Dutch flag – is a courtesy ensign showing the country to which she was bound.25 Up till 1635 if not later, Brussels operated a system by which Dutch merchants could trade in and out of Dunkirk on payment of a licence.26 Presumably it was the same as that which was applied at Antwerp, in which case there was likely to have been reciprocal arrangements for Dunkirk merchants trading with the northern Netherlands.
Gregory Martin, 2022
Vey in S.J. Barnes, N. de Poorter, O. Millar and H. Vey, Anthony van Dyck: A Complete Catalogue of the Paintings, New Haven (Conn.)/London 2004, no. III.72
1827, p. 22, no. 81 (as of François van der Borcht); 1843, p. 18, no. 79 (as Burgomaster van der Borcht with a view of Antwerp); 1853, p. 10, no. 75 (as of Jacob van der Borcht, fl. 100,000); 1858, p. 35, no. 77; 1872, pp. 41-2, no. 85 (as of Jacob van der Borcht); 1880, p. 397, no. 464; 1885, p. 69, no. 309 (as after Van Dyck and of Nicolas van der Borcht); 1893, p. 91, no. 856 (as of Nicolaes van der Borcht); 1934, p. 91, no. 856 (with Dunkirk in the background); 1960, p. 91, no. 856 (as the view of Dunkirk perhaps by Andries van Ertveld); 1976, p. 208, no. A 101 (as Nicolaes van der Borcht, Merchant of Antwerp)
G. Martin, 2022, 'Anthony van Dyck, Portrait of a Nobleman, possibly Adriaan van der Borcht, 1634 - c. 1635', in Flemish Paintings in the Rijksmuseum, online coll. cat. Amsterdam: hdl.handle.net/10934/RM0001.COLLECT.6670
(accessed 23 November 2024 22:25:58).