Object data
oil on panel
support: height 77.3 cm × width 131.9 cm
Hendrick Avercamp
c. 1608
oil on panel
support: height 77.3 cm × width 131.9 cm
The support consists of three horizontally grained oak planks and is bevelled on all sides. Dendrochronology has shown that the youngest heartwood ring was formed in 1582. The panel could have been ready for use by 1593, but a date in or after 1599 is more likely. There is an unpainted edge of 5 mm and remnants of a beard on both the right and left sides of the panel. The chalk ground has a white colour. Infrared reflectography shows an underdrawing indicating the forms of the architecture in a very summary way. X-radiographs show that the farmhouses in the foreground were reserved in the sky in accordance with the underdrawing. The sky, ice and landscape seem to have been painted first, without clear reserves, in several transparent layers. The figures and other details were then painted on top with short brushstrokes, and often overlap passages, boats and trees that had been painted earlier. There are quite a few pentimenti in the figures, with some being moved and painted over (on the right by the fishing net, for example), or added at a later stage. The roof of the farmhouse was also some 3 cm higher initially. One striking feature is the way in which the shadows of the skaters are rendered with delicate horizontal lines on the ice. Several details were scratched into the wet paint, in the small tree in the foreground, for instance. The few paint samples taken in 1989 revealed that the binding medium contains both oil and proteins.
unpublished entry by Ariane van Suchtelen based on the observations of H. Kat and M. Bijl, RMA, 1995
Fair. Although the paint layer is not very abraded, there is raised paint along the grain and a strong craquelure throughout. The painting has a history of flaking and is rather fragile, but the adhesion of the paint layers is now stable.
...; ? sale, E.A. van Ourijk et al., Rotterdam (auction house not known), 19 July 1748, no. 1, fl. 25;1...; sale, Gijsbert de Clercq (1850-1911), Amsterdam (F. Muller), 1 June 1897, no. 1, fl. 345, to the dealer C.S. Roos; from whom, fl. 550, to the museum, with support from the Vereniging Rembrandt, 1897
Object number: SK-A-1718
Credit line: Purchased with the support of the Vereniging Rembrandt
Copyright: Public domain
Hendrick Avercamp (Amsterdam 1585 - Kampen 1634)
The eldest son of the apothecary Barent Hendricksz Avercamp and Beatrix Peters Vekemans, Hendrick Avercamp was baptized in the Oude Kerk in Amsterdam on 25 January 1585. In 1586 his father became the town apothecary of Kampen, and the family moved there. As Hendrick was deaf and dumb from birth, he was commonly known as ‘de Stom’ or ‘de Stomme’ (‘the mute’). Since one of the buyers at the studio sale of Pieter Isaacsz in Amsterdam in 1607 is mentioned as ‘de stom tot Pieter Isacqs’ (‘the mute at Pieter Isaacsz’s’), it is thought that Avercamp was sent to Amsterdam to live and study with the history and portrait painter Pieter Isaacsz (1569-1625), who returned to his native Denmark in that year. By January 1613, but probably earlier, Avercamp must have returned to Kampen, where he remained for the rest of his life. Shortly before his mother died, she expressed in her will her concern about her unmarried eldest son Hendrick, who she called ‘stom en miserabel’ (‘mute and miserable’). Hendrick was buried on 15 May 1634 in the Bovenkerk (or Sint-Nicolaaskerk) in Kampen.
Avercamp mainly painted winter scenes, called ‘wintertjes’ in the 17th century. His early paintings, dated 1608 and 1609, show the influence of Flemish landscape painters like Hans Bol, Gillis van Coninxloo and David Vinckboons, and a strong interest in narrative details in the tradition of Pieter Brueghel. The Flemish influence becomes less noticeable in his later works, with the horizon lines being lower and the perspective more natural. Although best known for his winter landscape paintings, he also drew several and painted a few summer and river landscapes. Hendrick Avercamp was a prolific draughtsman, mostly in pen, chalk and watercolour, creating figure studies for his paintings and fully worked-out drawings as detailed as his paintings. The latter drawings were probably intended for sale. Paintings by artists such as Arent Arentsz (1585/86-1631), Adam van Breen (c. 1585-after 1642), Antonie Verstralen (c. 1594-1641) and Hendrick’s nephew Barent Avercamp (1612/13-79) strongly resemble his work, but it is unclear whether those artists were taught by him or simply imitated his work.
Jan Piet Filedt Kok, 2007
References
Benezit in Thieme/Becker II, 1908, pp. 276-77; Welcker 1933, pp. 33-71; Blankert in Amsterdam-Zwolle 1982, pp. 15-36; Hensbroek in Saur V, 1992, pp. 728-29; Hensbroek in Turner 1996, II, pp. 854-55
This is not only one of Avercamp’s early works but is also the largest and most ambitious winter landscape he ever painted. He was the first Dutch artist to depict winter and its recreations, and in doing so he built on the example set by his southern Netherlandish predecessors. The high horizon, the quite complex buildings making up the village, and the prominent bare trees that serve as repoussoirs, recall the work of Flemish immigrants in Amsterdam like Hans Bol and David Vinckboons.2
The tall trees in the left and right foreground act like stage flats by drawing the eye into the composition. The recession into depth along the frozen river that has burst its banks is suggested by the succession of buildings and trees, and in the middleground by the wooden posts marking the route taken by the ferry.3 The transition of the colours, ending with almost white tints merging with the sky in the distance, creates an aerial perspective. Rising up behind the farmhouses in the middleground on the right is the unrealistic detail of a barely visible white mountain with a flour mill on top. Although the narrative and anecdotal nature of the scene can be found on a more limited scale in the work of his Flemish contemporaries, Avercamp’s pronounced realism gives his paintings a character all their own. He took a rare delight in depicting events on the ice, which he did with a great feeling for variety: children and adults are out for a stroll on the frozen river, people play kolf, the forerunner of golf, there are sleighs and, in the distance, ice-boats. One picturesque detail on the left is the fisherman with his eel spear over his shoulder.4 The meticulously detailed costumes show that the figures are from all classes of society.
The prominent building in the left foreground with the two lions from the Antwerp coat of arms is thought to be a brewery or an inn called The Half Moon (‘De Halve Maan’ are the words on the sign board). Here, too, there is a mass of narrative detail, such as the bare buttocks on the lavatory on the left, the amorous couple on the haystack, and so on. In the left foreground is the half half eaten carcase of a horse with crows and a dog around it, and there is a bird trap surrounded by footprints in the snow. Avercamp took the latter detail from Pieter Brueghel the Elder’s Landscape with Skaters and Bird Trap of 1563, which he could have known from one of the many copies,5 in which there is the same high horizon and similar silhouetted trees.
The Rijksmuseum painting dates from the period of Avercamp’s Winter Landscape in the Billedgalerie in Bergen (Norway),6 which is related to it in composition, palette and the level of the high horizon. From the same period or a little later there is the slightly smaller but equally ambitious Winter Landscape with Numerous Skaters in Schwerin,7 in which the horizon is a little lower but the palette is comparable. A subsequent stage in the artist’s development is represented by Ice-skating in a Village (SK-A-1320), where the horizon is considerably lower.
Details like the bird trap, the gnawed carcase of the horse and other details have led to speculation about hidden allusions to the fragility of life. Brueghel’s bird trap had already been associated with the dangerous slipperiness and unreliability of ice.8
Jan Piet Filedt Kok, 2007
See Bibliography and Rijksmuseum painting catalogues
See Key to abbreviations and Acknowledgements
This entry was published in J. Bikker (ed.), Dutch Paintings of the Seventeenth Century in the Rijksmuseum Amsterdam, I: Artists Born between 1570 and 1600, coll. cat. Amsterdam 2007, no. 10.
Welcker 1933, p. 204, no. S 10; Welcker 1979, p. 204, no. S 10; De Bruyn Kops in Amsterdam etc. 1987, pp. 257-59, no. 6; Van Suchtelen in Amsterdam 1993, pp. 634-35, no. 305
1903, p. 35, no. 392; 1934, p. 35, no. 392; 1960, p. 24, no. 392; 1976, p. 91, no. A 1718; 2007, no. 10
J.P. Filedt Kok, 2007, 'Hendrick Avercamp, Winter Landscape with Skaters, c. 1608', in J. Bikker (ed.), Dutch Paintings of the Seventeenth Century in the Rijksmuseum, online coll. cat. Amsterdam: hdl.handle.net/10934/RM0001.COLLECT.5853
(accessed 22 November 2024 04:45:36).