Object data
oil on canvas
support: height 125.2 cm × width 102.2 cm
Gerard van Honthorst (workshop of)
1650
oil on canvas
support: height 125.2 cm × width 102.2 cm
The plain-weave canvas support has been lined. Cusping, present on all four sides, is very prominent on the left side only. Although not clearly visible, the ground appears to be light-coloured. The paint layers were smoothly applied, with impasto confined to the highlights. A possible pentimento indicates that Amalia’s right hand might have been placed a little higher at first.
Fair. Old retouchings are visible in the sky, and the varnish is matte in places.
...; ? from Mr Hodges, Amsterdam, fl. 100, to the museum, before 1801;1 on loan to the Hofwijck Huygens Museum, Voorburg, since 2002
Object number: SK-A-179
Copyright: Public domain
Gerard van Honthorst (Utrecht 1592 - Utrecht 1656)
Gerard van Honthorst was born in Utrecht on 4 November 1592 into a family of artists. His father, Herman Gerritsz van Honthorst, was a decorative painter and probably his first teacher. According to Von Sandrart and Houbraken, Honthorst trained with Abraham Bloemaert. When exactly he went to Italy is not known; a drawn copy after Caravaggio’s Martyrdom of St Peter in the Church of Santa Maria del Popolo is dated 1616,2 indicating that he was in Rome by that year. His first documented painting, The Beheading of St John the Baptist, was executed for the Church of Santa Maria della Scala in 1617-18.3 Such Caravaggesque night scenes, which often include artificial sources of illumination, garnered Honthorst the nickname ‘Gherardo delle Notti’ in Italy. Among his Roman patrons were the Marchese Vincenzo Giustiniani, in whose house Honthorst lived, and Cardinal Scipione Borghese.
A few months after his return to Utrecht in 1620, Honthorst married Sophia Coopmans. He joined the Guild of St Luke there and set up his own workshop. Von Sandrart, one of his apprentices in the 1620s, informs us that Honthorst had as many as 25 pupils at a time, from each of whom he received the sizable tuition fee of 100 guilders a year. With the exception of 1627, Honthorst served as dean of the guild between 1625 and 1630. It was also in the mid-1620s that he received his first commission from the court of Frederik Hendrik in The Hague.4 A commission from the British ambassador in The Hague, Sir Dudley Carleton, for Lord Arundel came as early as 16205 and eventually led to the invitation from Charles I to work on Banqueting House in Whitehall in 1628.6 Honthorst returned to the United Provinces the same year, but continued to work for the English court in the years to come. In 1630 he became court painter to the exiled King and Queen of Bohemia, Frederick V and Elizabeth, in The Hague. Honthorst also painted numerous portraits of the Stadholder and his wife, Amalia van Solms, and took part in the decoration of, among others, the palaces Honselaarsdijk, Huis ter Nieuburch (1636-39) and Huis ten Bosch (1649-50). In order to accommodate his work in The Hague, he set up a second workshop there in 1637 and joined the guild, serving as dean in 1640. Also in 1637, he became the principal artist to decorate the Banqueting Hall in Kronborg Castle for King Christian IV of Denmark. Honthorst was, perhaps, the most internationally successful Dutch artist of his time. Despite, or possibly as a result of this success, his late style was criticized as ‘stiff ’ and ‘slick’ (‘stijve gladdicheyt’) and he was esteemed a ‘much less great master than themselves’ (‘beaucoup moins grand maistre qu’eux’) by his fellow artists working on the Oranjezaal.7 He died on 27 April 1656 and was buried in the Catharijnekerk in Utrecht.
Jonathan Bikker, 2007
References
Mancini c. 1620, fol. 86 (Judson/Ekkart 1999, p. 47); Von Sandrart 1675 (1925), pp. 22, 102, 172-74; Houbraken I, 1718, pp. 149-50; Braun 1966, pp. 7-59, 340-88 (documents); Bok in Utrecht-Braunschweig 1986, pp. 276-79; Bok in San Francisco etc. 1997, pp. 382-83; Judson/Ekkart 1999, pp. XXXIII-XXXIV, 1-24
Frederik Hendrik had died three years prior to the execution of this pendant pair. The three-quarter length figure (see SK-A-178) has been replicated from Honthorst’s Portrait of Frederik Hendrik, Prince of Orange, his Wife Amalia van Solms and their Three Youngest Daughters, Albertina Agnes, Henrietta Catharina and Maria (SK-A-874), where he is shown at full-length.8 The table, curtain, balustrade and open-air background are also the same as in that painting.
The pendant, of Amalia van Solms (shown here), is also based on SK-A-874.9 Unlike the prototype, Amalia is shown in front of a curtain that drapes over the balustrade. Executed three years after the prototype, her costume has been updated. The jewels on her bodice are different, and the sleeves of her dress are not fastened to the bodice with pearls. The fluttering veil in the prototype has been replaced with a toer (the black gauze trim along the décolleté).
As Middelkoop has observed, the light enters from the left in the Portrait of Frederik Hendrik, but from the right in the pendant indicating, perhaps, that the paintings were originally hung between two windows.10 The fact that the present paintings were derived from the above-mentioned portrait by Honthorst, and their somewhat stiff execution, suggests that they were produced by Honthorst’s studio.
Jonathan Bikker, 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. 144.
Middelkoop in Nagasaki 1992, pp. 159-66, nos. 19, 20 (as Gerard van Honthorst); Judson/Ekkart 1999, p. 234, no. 296, version 3 (replica), p. 235, no. 296, version 15 (studio replica), with earlier literature
1801, p. 50, nos. 126, 127 (as Gerard van Honthorst); 1809, p. 36, no. 149 (as Gerard van Honthorst); 1843, p. 31, no. 145 (as Gerard van Honthorst; ‘has filled holes’); 1853, p. 14, nos. 133, 134 (as Gerard van Honthorst; fl. 600; fl. 600); 1858, p. 69, nos. 147, 148 (as Gerard van Honthorst); 1880, pp. 150-52, nos. 154, 155 (as Willem van Honthorst); 1887, pp. 79-80, nos. 670, 571 (as Gerard van Honthorst); 1903, p. 133, nos. 1238, 1239 (as Gerard van Honthorst); 1934, p. 135, nos. 1238, 1239 (as Gerard van Honthorst); 1960, p. 143, nos. 1238, 1239 (as Gerard van Honthorst); 1976, p. 286, no. A 178, A 179 (as Gerard van Honthorst); 2007, no. 144
J. Bikker, 2007, 'workshop of Gerard van Honthorst, Portrait of Amalia van Solms (1602-75), 1650', in J. Bikker (ed.), Dutch Paintings of the Seventeenth Century in the Rijksmuseum, online coll. cat. Amsterdam: hdl.handle.net/10934/RM0001.COLLECT.8756
(accessed 27 December 2024 22:16:45).