Object data
oil on panel
support: height 48.7 cm × width 68 cm
Bartholomeus Breenbergh
1639
oil on panel
support: height 48.7 cm × width 68 cm
The oak support consists of three horizontally grained planks. The panel was thinned for cradling. Dendrochronology has shown that the youngest heartwood ring was formed in 1618. The panel could have been ready for use by 1629, but a date in or after 1635 is more likely. The figures in the foreground and details in the landscape were painted fluidly with visible impasto over the otherwise thinly painted mountainous landscape, which is transparent in places, allowing the light ground to show through. The paint in the sky was also thinly applied, again revealing the light ground and, in several areas, the grain of the wood. A pentimento is present in the head of Jacob, which was originally more to the right.
Fair. The panel has three minor horizontal cracks with some old discoloured retouchings along them. The cradling of the panel does not seem to interfere with the stability of the panel and that of the painted surface, which is well preserved. It is possible that the paint has become somewhat transparent in the sky.
...; sale, M. du C[harteaux], Paris (P. Remy, J.A. Lebrun), 2 May 1791 sqq., no. 35 (‘Un paysage orné de deux figures sur le devant, représentant le combat mystérieux de l’Ange avec Jacob. Hauteur, 18 pouces; largeur, 24 pouces.[48.7 x 65 cm]B[ois]’), 30 livres 4, to the dealer Sollier for Charles Pierre Savalette de Magnanville;1...; from the dealer J.E. Goedhart, Amsterdam, fl. 150, to the museum, January 1898
Object number: SK-A-1724
Copyright: Public domain
Bartholomeus Breenbergh (Deventer 1598 - Amsterdam 1657)
The son of a pharmacist, Bartholomeus Breenbergh was baptized in the Reformed Church of Deventer on 13 November 1598. After his father’s death in 1607 the family moved to Hoorn. As already noted by Houbraken, nothing is known about Bartholomeus’s training. He is first recorded as a painter in October 1619 in Amsterdam, and by the end of that year he was listed in the census of Rome as a Catholic. He was one of the founding members of the society of Dutch artists, the Bentvueghels, in which he was given the sobriquet ‘het fret’ (‘the weasel’). Some 30, mostly small cabinet paintings and 80 drawings can be ascribed to his decade in Italy. His first signed and dated painting, The Finding of Moses, is from 1622.2 It shows the influence of the Pre-Rembrandtists, and especially of Jan Pynas, with whose work Breenbergh could have already familiarized himself in Amsterdam. The other paintings from his Roman sojourn are mostly Italianate landscapes with staffage, but without any particular subject. Their style is deeply indebted to such painters as Adam Elsheimer, Filippo Napoletano and Paulus Bril, and show a great similarity to the cabinet pieces of Cornelis van Poelenburch, with which they have often been confused. According to his own testimony (1653), Breenbergh often observed Bril painting during the seven years he knew him in Rome, and he copied his work.
The exact date of Breenbergh’s return to Holland is not known. While a drawing dated 1630 shows a ruin which could be Borgvliet near Bergen op Zoom,3 he had settled in Amsterdam by 1633, where he married Rebecca Schellingwou, who came from a fervent Roman Catholic family of cloth merchants. The most important difference between his Italian work and the more than 100 paintings he produced in Amsterdam after his return is the introduction of biblical or mythological subject matter into his classical landscapes, and the greater prominence given to the figures. Although the production of small coppers and panels continued, larger formats predominate. Besides paintings and drawings, Breenbergh produced prints. After the 1630s his artistic output seems to have diminished, which might be related to the fact that he is recorded as a merchant in several documents from 1649 on. His last and most ambitious picture, Joseph Distributing Corn in Egypt of 1654, a complex composition crowded with large figures, is a synthesis of his mature style.4 He was buried in the Dutch Reformed Oude Kerk in Amsterdam on 5 October 1657.
Although it has been suggested that Jan de Bisschop (1628-71) was a pupil of Breenbergh, nothing points to the presence of a workshop, nor is there any information about possible patrons. It is likely, though, that Paolo Giordano Orsini II, Duca di Bracciano was one of them during Breenbergh’s time in Rome, as he made several monumental drawings of Bomarzo, the family’s seat, and the Orsini inventory of 1655/56 records seven of his landscapes.
Taco Dibbits, 2007
References
Houbraken I, 1718, pp. 369-70; Descamps II, 1754, pp. 299-301; Roethlisberger 1969, pp. 3-19; Nalis 1972; Roethlisberger 1981, pp. 2-22; Roethlisberger 1985; Roethlisberger 1991, pp. V-X; Verdi 2005, pp. 10-23
While Breenbergh’s early Roman work consists mainly of small classical landscapes staffed with figures but without a particular subject, the majority of his landscapes painted after his return to Amsterdam in the early 1630s contain biblical subjects. As in the present painting, his choice of themes, most of them taken from the Old Testament, was similar to that of the Pre-Rembrandtists in Amsterdam. Although the subject of Jacob wrestling with the angel is extremely rare, it does have a predecessor in a drawing and painting by Moyses van Wtenbrouck dated 1623.5 In these, Jacob is also seen from behind wrestling with the angel on the near bank of the river Jordan while his family is seen crossing the river at Jabbok in the background. The physical act of the angel dislocating Jacob’s hip as described in the Bible is emphasized in the Rijksmuseum painting by the angel’s left leg, which is flung forcefully around Jacob, whose hat has fallen to the ground.6 The stick next to Jacob’s coat in the left foreground might refer to the previous episode, when Jacob prayed to God, saying that at his first crossing of the river he only had his staff and now he had become two bands.7
Although Breenbergh’s paintings from the early 1630s are mostly larger in size and show crowded histories and richly adorned landscapes, the majority of those from the late 30s have only two protagonists, as in the present picture. Furthermore, his brushwork became increasingly transparent and his palette more or less monochromatic, with brown ochre predominating. Even though the brown tonality of this composition could allude to the early morning, the time of day until which the wrestling bout lasted, it is nevertheless typical of Breenbergh’s paintings from the 1630s, which are more subdued than the brightly coloured small cabinet pieces he painted in Italy. An example of the latter is a small oval, the only other depiction of this subject attributed to Breenbergh. It shows the angel and Jacob in bright yellow, blue and red garments under a blue sky.8
A drawing by Breenbergh in the Frits Lugt Collection that is traditionally dated around the same time as the Rijksmuseum picture also shows Jacob and the angel wrestling on a plain clearly set apart from the valley in the background, in which Jacob’s family can be seen. In the drawing, though, the two figures are much closer to the foreground, which is completely shaded by trees on the left.9 It is not clear if it dates from before or after the painting. The fact that it was strongly influenced by Jan Pynas, and that the struggle between Jacob and the angel is less convincing, could be arguments for dating the drawing earlier than the painting.10 However, the differences between the drawing and the painting are too great to consider the former a preliminary study.
The present painting may very well have been the one in the 1750 sale of the estate of the artist Cornelis Troost,11 as the subject is so rare, and the only other known painting of this subject by Breenbergh was probably part of a set. The catalogue, however, does not give the measurements of the paintings, which makes it impossible to substantiate this assumption.
Taco Dibbits, 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. 34.
Stechow 1930, p. 137; Roethlisberger 1981, p. 78, no. 197; Van de Kamp in Amsterdam 1991b, p. 225, no. 13
1903, p. 64, no. 620; 1934, p. 61, no. 620; 1960, p. 57, no. 620; 1976, p. 143, no. A 1724; 2007, no. 34
T. Dibbits, 2007, 'Bartholomeus Breenbergh, Jacob Wrestling with the Angel (Genesis 32:26-31), 1639', in J. Bikker (ed.), Dutch Paintings of the Seventeenth Century in the Rijksmuseum, online coll. cat. Amsterdam: hdl.handle.net/10934/RM0001.COLLECT.6236
(accessed 23 November 2024 06:09:00).