Object data
oil on canvas
support: height 113 cm × width 92.2 cm
outersize: depth 10.5 cm (support incl. SK-L-4966)
Jan Mijtens
c. 1660
oil on canvas
support: height 113 cm × width 92.2 cm
outersize: depth 10.5 cm (support incl. SK-L-4966)
Support The plain-weave canvas has been lined and was transferred onto a larger stretcher. All tacking edges have been preserved. The top and bottom edges have been let out to the front by approx. 0.5 cm, and the right one by approx. 1 cm. Deep (primary) cusping at intervals of approx. 11 cm and shallow (secondary) cusping at intervals of approx. 7.5 cm can clearly be seen on all sides. Linear crack patterns parallel to the left and right edges may correspond to the bars of the original strainer.
Preparatory layers The single, light, warm grey ground extends up to the tacking edges at the bottom and on the left, and partially over the ones at the top and on the right. It consists of coarse white pigment particles with an addition of earth pigments and fine black pigment particles.
Underdrawing No underdrawing could be detected with the naked eye or infrared photography.
Paint layers The paint extends up to the tacking edges. A first lay-in of the thin, dark areas of the composition, particularly the landscape, was made with earth colours ranging from red to brown. The painting was built up from the back to the front and from dark to light, leaving reserves for the vista and the sitter, the edges of which were carefully closed. Red underpaint shows through at the contours of the flesh tones, for example at the bottom of Jacoba van Orliens’s right hand. The skin and facial features were blended wet in wet, with carefully defined transitions in brown. The dress was constructed from a grey mid-tone with white highlights, and deepened with dark grey contours. The positions of the index finger, thumb and little finger of her left hand were adjusted with pink.
Gwen Tauber, 2023
Good. There are some small paint losses along the edges.
A frame with pendant festoon on auricular carving1
For both the present painting (SK-A-3022) and its pendant (SK-A-3021)
? Commissioned by or for the sitters; ? their daughter, Helena Catharina de Witte (1661-1695), wife of Imam Mogge (1651-1716), with Haamstede Castle, Schouwen; ? their son, Rutschert Mogge (1682-1729), with Haamstede Castle; ? his son, Imam Mogge (1707-1737), with Haamstede Castle; ? his son, Willem Ferdinand Mogge (1731-1769), with Haamstede Castle; ? his daughter, Susanna Cornelia Mogge (1753-1806), wife of Hendrik Muilman (1743-1812, Amsterdam), with Haamstede Castle; ? their son, Willem Ferdinand Mogge Muilman (1778-1849), with Haamstede Castle; his daughter, Anna-Maria van de Poll-Mogge Muilman (1811-1878), with Haamstede Castle;2 bequeathed to Adriaan van der Hoop (1778-1854), Amsterdam, with other family portraits, 1853;3 his widow, Dieuwke Fontein (1800-1879), Spaarnberg, Santpoort; her granddaughter, Olga E.A.E. Wüste, née Baroness von Gotsch (1848-1924), Santpoort; donated from her estate by her great-niece, Johanna Gerarda Fontein (1857-1941), to the museum, with three other paintings, 19244
Object number: SK-A-3022
Credit line: Gift of J.G. Fontein, Santpoort
Copyright: Public domain
Jan Mijtens (The Hague c. 1613/14 - The Hague 1670)
Jan Mijtens was born in The Hague at the end of 1613 or in January 1614 as the son of David Mijtens and Judith Hennicx. His father was a saddler and a member of the prosperous middle class. The extended family came from Flanders originally and produced numerous painters who remained active in various European countries until the eighteenth century. Jan Mijtens very probably started his apprenticeship with his uncle Isaac Mijtens and trained in all likelihood briefly with the latter’s elder brother, Daniel Mijtens, who returned to The Hague in 1635 after many years in England.
In 1639 Mijtens registered as a master painter with the Guild of St Luke in The Hague. His earliest dated pictures, two group portraits, are from 1638.5 In 1642 he married his cousin Anna, the London-born daughter of his uncle Daniel. One of the couple’s children, named Daniel as well, followed in his father’s footsteps. Other pupils of Mijtens were Julius de Geest (1638/39-1699), son of the Frisian portraitist Wybrand de Geest, Nicolaes Lissant (1639/40-after 1696), Gerard de Nijst (dates unknown), Adriaen Stalpert van der Wiele (dates unknown), Pouwels van de Velde (dates unknown), Andries Thijsz de Wit (dates unknown) and Urbanus Talibert van Yperen (c. 1630-in or after 1682). Only the first two left works that have survived.
Mijtens became one of the first members of the newly founded Confrerie Pictura artists’ society in 1656, and he was then immediately elected warden, a post which he held again in 1658-59, and another three times in 1665-69. Although repeatedly nominated as dean he only occupied that position in 1669-70. The Pictura archives also state that he was a captain in the civic guard. Mijtens had certainly been an active member of the White Banner company of the St Sebastian civic guard since 1644. He was then the ensign, and was probably made its commander in 1660. In addition to these functions, he was a church councillor from 1646 to 1654 and a deacon of the Reformed Church.
Mijtens was primarily a portraitist, but he also made some history paintings in the form of biblical scenes and pastorals, and a few genre pieces. He received commissions from the Hague elite and members of the stadholder’s court, as well as from the daughters of Stadholder Frederik Hendrik living in Leeuwarden and Germany. Mijtens’s last dated pictures are the pendants of 1668 of Cornelis Tromp and his wife Margaretha van Raephorst.6 It is known from the sources that even in 1670, the year he died, he was working on portraits for Henriette Catharina, the princess consort of Anhalt-Dessau. After Mijtens’s death on 19 December and burial in the family grave in The Hague’s Grote Kerk on the 24th, one of these likenesses was completed by his son Daniel, who had moved back from Italy shortly before.7 Mijtens was reasonably well-off. In 1669 his wealth was assessed at 20,000 guilders for tax purposes. It had not all been earned from painting; some of it came from various legacies.
Richard Harmanni, 2023
References
J. van der Does, ’s-Graven-Hage, met de voornaemste plaetsen en vermaecklijckheden, The Hague 1668, pp. 91-92; J. von Sandrart, Academie der Bau-, Bild- und Mahlerey-Künste von 1675: Leben der berühmten Maler, Bildhauer und Baumeister, ed. A.R. Peltzer, Munich 1925 (ed. princ. Nuremberg 1675), p. 350; F.D.O. Obreen, Archief voor Nederlandsche kunstgeschiedenis: Verzameling van meerendeels onuitgegeven berichten en mededeelingen betreffende Nederlandsche schilders, plaatsnijders, beeldhouwers, bouwmeesters, juweliers, goud- en zilverdrijvers [enz.], IV, Rotterdam 1881-82, passim; ibid., V, 1882-83, pp. 82, 84, 145-48, 153; A. von Wurzbach, Niederländisches Künstler-Lexikon, II, Leipzig/Vienna 1910, pp. 211-12; Lundberg in U. Thieme and F. Becker (eds.), Allgemeines Lexikon der bildenden Künstler von der Antike bis zur Gegenwart, XXV, Leipzig 1931, p. 317; Ekkart in E. Buijsen et al., Haagse schilders in de Gouden Eeuw: Het Hoogsteder Lexicon van alle schilders werkzaam in Den Haag 1600-1700, exh. cat. The Hague (Haags Historisch Museum) 1998-99, pp. 206-10; A.N. Bauer, Jan Mijtens (1613/14-1670): Leben und Werk, Petersberg 2006, pp. 20-28, 129-50 (documents); Bauer in Saur Allgemeines Künstlerlexikon: Die Bildenden Künstler aller Zeiten und Völker, LXXXIX, Munich/Leipzig 2016, p. 424
Six of the sixteen surviving pendant portraits by Jan Mijtens are in the collection of the Rijksmuseum. The earliest of these is the pair of Jacoba van Orliens, shown here, and her husband Jacob de Witte, a Zeeland regent (SK-A-3021; also fig. a). Only the man’s picture bears the date 1660, but it can be taken as read that both were painted in the same year. The couple had married shortly before, on 15 October 1659.8 The young Jacoba, who had just celebrated her 16th birthday at the time of their wedding, was born into a regent family of Middelburg.
Jacob de Witte and Jacoba van Orliens are shown against the backdrop of a majestic tree trunk and a large rock respectively, with a view into a distant landscape. Like her husband Jacoba is wearing a fanciful costume. Her dress is modestly trimmed with a precious stone as well as some pearls, of which there are more hanging around her neck, from her ears and in her hair. Her elegance is accentuated by her raised right hand holding part of a drapery. This pose, which had been introduced by Anthony van Dyck, had become a popular motif in seventeenth-century formal likenesses and was a favourite device of Mijtens too.9 Standing in the left foreground is a bush of pale pink roses, which is a reference to Jacoba’s recent married status. In the emblem literature these flowers are associated with love and, because of their thorns, with the obstacles a wedded couple may have to withstand.10
Both companion pieces belong to the genre of fashionable courtly portraits with which Adriaen Hanneman and Pieter Nason also scored a great success with their clients in The Hague.11 Starting in the 1660s Mijtens painted many individual likenesses and pairs of this type, and the early one of Jacob de Witte, in particular, shows that he had already fully mastered it at the time.12 The sitters are usually extravagantly attired and are posed against a rock or large tree with a view through into an idealized Italianate landscape to one side.
Both pictures were hung in Haamstede Castle when Jacob de Witte came into possession of it in 1678, and with the property they passed down through the Mogge and Muilman families until 1853, when the manor was sold by the last descendant, Anna-Maria Mogge Muilman. At the same time she bequeathed these pendants and other family portraits to Adriaan van der Hoop, who promised that he would exclude them from any sale of his collection.13 They went to his heirs after he died and were donated to the Rijksmuseum in 1924, together with three more paintings,14 but none of the other family portraits from Haamstede Castle given to Van der Hoop were among them.
Richard Harmanni, 2023
See Key to abbreviations, Rijksmuseum painting catalogues and Acknowledgements
For both the present painting (SK-A-3022) and its pendant (SK-A-3021)
P.J.J. van Thiel and C.J. de Bruyn Kops, Framing in the Golden Age: Picture and Frame in 17th-Century Holland, Zwolle 1995, p. 214; A. Pollmer, ‘Catalogus van de schilderijen in de verzameling van Adriaan van der Hoop’, in E. Bergvelt et al., De Hollandse meesters van een Amsterdamse bankier: De verzameling van Adriaan van der Hoop (1778-1854), exh. cat. Amsterdam (Amsterdams Historisch Museum; Rijksmuseum) 2004-05, pp. 135-95, esp. p. 190, nos. B3, B4; A.N. Bauer, Jan Mijtens (1613/14-1670): Leben und Werk, Petersberg 2006, pp. 222-23, nos. A97, A98, with earlier literature
1926, p. 141, no. 1703b; 1934, p. 204, no. 1703b; 1960, p. 223, no. 1703 A 2; 1976, p. 407, no. A 3022
Richard Harmanni, 2023, 'Jan Mijtens, Portrait of Jacoba van Orliens (1643-1691), c. 1660', in J. Bikker (ed.), Dutch Paintings of the Seventeenth Century in the Rijksmuseum, online coll. cat. Amsterdam: hdl.handle.net/10934/RM0001.COLLECT.9496
(accessed 23 November 2024 01:01:16).