Object data
oil on panel
support: height 74.7 cm × width 86 cm × thickness 6.5 cm
Master of the Good Samaritan
? Utrecht, 1537
oil on panel
support: height 74.7 cm × width 86 cm × thickness 6.5 cm
The support consists of five vertically grained oak planks (25.4, 14.2, 13.3, 14 and 19 cm), approx. 1 cm thick. On the reverse there are traces of saw (?) marks as well as the outlines of former horizontal braces. Dendrochronology has shown that the youngest heartwood ring was formed in 1510. The panel could have been ready for use by 1521, but a date in or after 1535 is more likely. Five holes along each edge (now filled with wood paste), as well as indentations of approx. 1 cm at the top and bottom of the back, probably relate to an older frame or frames. The panel has a white ground and is painted up to the edges. The underdrawing can occasionally be seen with the naked eye in the body of the wounded man and along the contours of the mountains in the background. Infrared reflectography reveals an elaborate underdrawing throughout the composition done in a dry medium, probably black chalk (fig. a). All the compositional elements have been outlined, and shading is often quite heavy, usually in the form of short diagonal strokes and zigzags. There are some changes in the background: the horse and rider near the pyramid were shifted in position, and two trees underdrawn above the Samaritan’s head were omitted. The Samaritan’s hand holding the bottle and the figure of the monk at lower right were added in paint only. The most significant revisions, however, occur in the figure of the wounded man (see Entry). In general, the paint was applied smoothly, although the sharp highlights on the bark of the tree trunk and leaves of background trees were applied much more thickly.
Faries 1975, pp. 161-65
Fair. There are paint losses, especially in the head of the white horse in the foreground, and discoloured vertical retouching in the body of the Samaritan. The varnish is only slightly yellowed.
…; sale, John David Chambers (†) (Salisbury) et al. [section Chambers], London (Christie’s), 12 February 1898, no. 75, as Jan van Scorel; ...; sale, Peter Arell Brown Widener (1834-1915, Philadelphia) et al. [section ‘collection d’un amateur Anglais’], Amsterdam (F. Muller), 30 June 1909, no. 61, fl. 200;1 ...; collection Antoon Derkinderen (1859-1925), Amsterdam, as Jan van Scorel, 1913;2; his widow Johanna Henriëtte Derkinderen-Besier (1865-1944), Amsterdam;3 by whom bequeathed, with 177 other objects, to the museum, 1944
Object number: SK-A-3468
Credit line: J.H. Besier Bequest, Amsterdam
Copyright: Public domain
The Master of the Good Samaritan (active in Utrecht c. 1537 - c. 1545/46)
This master takes his name from the dated painting (1537) of the same title in the Rijksmuseum (SK-A-3468). His distinctive style first began to be recognised in the 1930s, when Friedländer began to doubt the general cataloguing of this master’s works along with those by Jan van Scorel, and described his manner of painting as ‘fremdartig hart’. His hard-edged style prompted other scholars such as J.G. van Gelder to identify the master as Cornelis Buys II. In the early 1940s, Hoogewerff placed this master among Scorel’s contemporaries and followers, and gathered seven rather heterogeneous works together under the name of the Monogrammist of Valenciennes, taking an Adoration of the Magi in Valenciennes as the key work.4 This group included two paintings that were unquestionably closely related, the one in the Rijksmuseum and a David and Goliath in Bonn that Hoogewerff noted was dated in a similar way in the foreground, 1538.5 In 1975, infrared reflectography enabled the present author to place this master in Scorel’s studio, because of shared working procedures and motifs that were revealed in both the Rijksmuseum painting and the Bonn David and Goliath. The present author also added several drawings to the master’s oeuvre, a Stoning of Stephen and a Sacrifice of Isaac,6 which showed that the Good Samaritan Master must have participated in several large commissions given to Scorel’s shop around 1540 and 1545/46. Lately, other scholars have made tentative additions to this master’s works, such as the pen and brown ink drawing, Draftsman among ruins, attributed to the master by Wolff.7 This drawing may indicate that the master travelled to Italy as other studio assistants of Scorel had, most notably Maarten van Heemskerck. In this regard, it should be added that Dacos has speculated that a Lamentation now in the Pinacoteca Nazionale in Ferrara, is also by the hand of the Good Samaritan Master.8
References
Friedländer XII, 1935, p. 201; Van Gelder 1939, p. 17; Hoogewerff IV, 1941-42, pp. 214-30; Utrecht 1955, pp. 61-62; Faries 1975, pp. 161-76; Wolff in Washington 1986, pp. 50-53; Faries in Brussels-Rome 1995, pp. 429-31; Dacos 1995, p. 31; Faries in coll. cat. Utrecht 2011, p. 119
M. Faries, 2010
Literature updated, 2016
The painting depicts the parable of the good Samaritan (Luke 10:30-35), which extols the universality of compassion. As told by Christ, a traveller going to Jericho from Jerusalem was robbed and left for dead by thieves. The robbers can still be seen: they appear as tiny figures, one carrying a large sword, escaping into the trees in the middle background. Several who saw the injured man passed by, first a priest and then a Levite, portrayed here on the right as an ecclesiastic dressed in black and a monk. It was a Samaritan, whose turban would identify him here as a Turk, who was the only one who stopped to tend to the wounded man. He has dismounted before a tree with a hollow trunk, and he kneels to support the battered traveller as he pours oil and wine on his wounds. Blood trickles down the traveller’s chest, and his impending death is suggested by his blueish-grey hands and feet. The figures on the right moving from the middleground to the background establish a path from the lower right to the upper left corner, where a later episode in the biblical story is shown. The Samaritan has placed the wounded man on his own horse and is taking him to an inn where he will arrange for his care.
The focus of the painting is on the nude form of the wounded man, whose sagging body has taken a complicated pose, with a limp arm, a sharply foreshortened head and crossed legs. Hoogewerff proposed the influence of Michelangelo’s Adam from the Sistine ceiling,9 but closer parallels for the figure can be found in Raphael’s works, the figure of Heliodorus in the Stanza fresco, The Expulsion of Heliodorus, the related figure of Ananias in the tapestry of The Death of Ananias, or a variant of both, such as the figure of Jacob in the fresco of Jacob’s Dream in the Loggia in the Vatican Palace.10 Technical examination reveals that almost all the compositional changes in this painting are concentrated in this figure (fig. a). In the underdrawn layout, the Samaritan’s right hand was originally under the wounded man’s armpit but has been shifted in the paint stage to just above his own knee. As a result, the wounded man’s arm was lifted and the elbow greatly enlarged, as were the hands and feet. The body type of the underlying figure has entirely different proportions, with a thinner torso and legs, and attenuated hands with long, tapering fingers. Since these are stylistic traits that can be associated with Jan van Scorel, it is likely that one of the sketches Scorel made of the monuments he had seen in Rome served as the model for the first version of the wounded man.11 Other instances of this phenomenon are known in the Jan van Scorel group: the form in the layout stage betrays its source more explicitly than the finalised image in paint.12
Although this painter has been variously identified in the past (see the biography), the Good Samaritan Master is now recognised as a talented assistant in Jan van Scorel’s workshop. In 1975, the present author assembled a small core oeuvre for the master consisting of drawings and paintings that date from 1537, the date of the Rijksmuseum painting, to c. 1545/46.13 This master’s technique differs from Scorel’s in that it relies on a thicker application of paint and bright colours, such as the yellows, oranges, blues and violets seen in the Rijksmuseum painting. The contrasts in lighting and modelling are almost harsh, and the master shows a preference for compact, knob-like forms, seen here in the foliage, and mountains and clouds in the background. Despite these differences, there is convincing evidence that the master worked in close proximity to Scorel. The Samaritan’s hand, which was added only in paint, may even have been executed by Scorel himself, who is known to have made similar additions to other workshop pieces.14 Moreover, the figure of the wounded man evokes the compassion shown for the crucified Christ in a scene such as the Lamentation, a theme that went through various manifestations in Scorel’s workshop in the years preceding the good Samaritan painting. Earlier scholars have rightly noted similarities with Scorel’s Lamentation in Utrecht.15 The antique buildings in the distance, the rotunda and the coffered vault, are also reminiscent of Scorel’s works.16 In particular, the columns of the temple of Saturn, the obelisk known as Caesar’s needle, and the pyramid of Caius Sextus form a group that must have been a Scorel workshop pattern. It occurs elsewhere in the Scorel group, in Scorel’s Madonna in Tambov,17 in the background of the Visscher van der Gheer Triptych in Utrecht,18 and in The Family of Ivo Fritema (?) in Groningen,19 a painting that is also sometimes attributed to the Good Samaritan Master.
The Rijksmuseum painting is one of the earliest depictions of the good Samaritan in the 16th-century Netherlands, and the subject becomes increasingly popular from this point on.20 Unfortunately, the commission and original function of this important painting remain unknown. The depiction of the passers-by as an ecclesiastic and monk in contemporary clothing might imply criticism of the clergy.21 It has also been suggested that the Rijksmuseum painting might have been commissioned by a surgeons’ guild,22 but the subject must have had broader appeal as well.
M. Faries, 2010
Literature updated, 2016
Hoogewerff 1923a, p. 73 (as Jan van Scorel); Friedländer XII, 1935, p. 201, no. 320 (as doubtful attribution to Jan van Scorel); Van Gelder 1939, p. 17 (as Cornelis Buys II); Hoogewerff IV, 1941-42, pp. 222-25 (as Monogrammist of Valenciennes); Utrecht 1955, pp. 61-62, no. 55 (as possibly Cornelis Buys); ENP XII, 1975, p. 122, no. 320 (as doubtful attribution to Jan van Scorel); Faries 1975, pp. 161-68 (as Master of the Good Samaritan); Faries in Utrecht-Douai 1977, pp. 107-08, no. 41; Faries in Amsterdam 1986a, pp. 236-37, no. 116; Faries in Brussels-Rome 1995, pp. 430-31, no. 253; Faries in coll. cat. Utrecht 2011, no. 10; Ubl in Scholten 2015, p. 189, no. 70
1960, pp. 284-85, no. 2197 A1 (as school of Jan van Scorel); 1976, p. 512, no. A 3468 (as school of Jan van Scorel); 1992, p. 97, no. A 3468
M. Faries, 2010, 'Meester van de Barmhartige Samaritaan, The Good Samaritan, Utrecht, 1537', in J.P. Filedt Kok and M. Ubl (eds.), Early Netherlandish Paintings, online coll. cat. Amsterdam: hdl.handle.net/10934/RM0001.COLLECT.5450
(accessed 13 November 2024 06:12:09).