Object data
oil on panel
support: height 64.4 cm × width 55.5 cm
Jan Cornelisz Vermeyen
? Mechelen, c. 1528 - c. 1530
oil on panel
support: height 64.4 cm × width 55.5 cm
The support consists of two vertically grained oak planks (25.4/24 and 29.2/29.7 cm). The planks are butt-joined. The support has been thinned to a thickness of approx. 0.7 cm and cradled. The edges of the original panel were probably trimmed slightly on all sides. Strips approx. 0.4 cm wide were added at the top, left and right sides (original size: 63.7 x 54.5 cm). Dendrochronology has shown that the youngest heartwood ring was formed in 1502. The panel could have been ready for use by 1513, but a date in or after 1527 is more likely. Microscopic analysis of the cross-sections showed that the white chalk ground is covered with a peach-coloured priming. Originally there seems to have been an unpainted edge of 0.3 cm wide on all sides which is now completely covered with paint. Infrared reflectography revealed only a few lines of underdrawing in a wet medium, consisting of some contour lines in the wrists and hands. No hatching was used to indicate shading. There are a few minor changes: the little finger and ring finger of the sitter’s left hand were shortened, and the outline of the angel at top right was not followed exactly in the paint. The painting method is direct, with a simple build-up of opaque layers and glazes. Delicate and feathery wet-in-wet brushwork was used for some areas of the finished surface. Cross-section analysis confirms that the green drapery was executed with identical paint layers and layer structure as in the companion panel (SK-C-1701).
Wallert et al. 2009
Fair. The paint film is badly damaged overall, and there are many paint losses, as well as scratches throughout. The most disfiguring ones, through the sitter’s right eye, nose, mouth and hands, were inflicted deliberately, probably by iconoclasts (c. 1560 or 1790). There is a large area of loss on the left side of the face. The eyes were completely lost, and were reconstructed as part of the treatment of the painting that probably took place in the early 20th century. There are also smaller losses in other parts of the painting. The area on either side of the join was planed in order to even out a difference in height between the planks. The green paint on the curtain has discoloured to a dark brown.
...; ? estate inventory, Archduchess Margaret of Austria (1480-1530), 1524-30 (‘Ung tableau, paint d’ung cousté d’une Nostre-Dame et de l’autre du cardinal de Liège, fermant à deux fuilletz.’);1 ...; Frau Ph. von Abegg, Wiesbaden, as Jan van Scorel, by 1904;2 …; collection A. de Hevesy (?), Paris;3 …; Richard von Kaufmann, Berlin, no. 115;4 …; the dealer P. Cassirer, Berlin, 1925;5 …; collection Catalina von Pannwitz (1876-1959), de Hartekamp, Heemstede and later South America, as Jan van Scorel, November 1925;6 from whom, through the dealer S. Rosenberg, New York, $ 45.000 (fl. 163,053), to the museum, with support from the Vereniging Rembrandt and the Fotocommissie, 1962
Object number: SK-A-4069
Credit line: Purchased with the support of the Vereniging Rembrandt, the State of the Netherlands and the Stichting tot de Bevordering van de Belangen van het Rijksmuseum
Copyright: Public domain
Jan Cornelisz Vermeyen (Beverwijk c. 1503 - Brussels 1559)
According to his epitaph, Jan Vermeyen was born in Beverwijk, a village about 10 kilometres north of Haarlem. The will that he made on 24 September 1559 states that he was about 55 years old at the time (‘omtrent vive(n)vyftich jaere(n)’), so he must have been born around 1503.7 He was buried in the St Gorickkerk (Church of St Géry) in Brussels in 1559, which contained his epitaph and paintings by him (the church was demolished in 1799). Nothing is known about his first marriage, but it is assumed that his first wife died before he left for Spain in 1534. He probably married his second wife, Jida de Neve, in Brussels after his return to the Netherlands in 1540. Their son Hans Vermeyen (before 1559-1606) was a goldsmith who became a master in 1590 and was employed by Emperor Rudolf II.
Nothing is known about Vermeyen’s artistic training. The influence of both Jan Gossart and Jan van Scorel can be detected in his early works. Van Mander relates that Vermeyen and Jan van Scorel were friends and business partners. He was in the service of Margaret of Austria at the court in Mechelen between 1525 and her death in December 1530. In 1529 he received an annual stipend of 100 Flemish pounds. The works he painted for the regent were primarily portraits of her family and other relatives, and it was for this reason that he visited Augsburg in 1530. He did some work for Margaret’s successor, Mary of Hungary, the sister of Charles V, between 1530 and 1533, but he was probably not employed by her.
Vermeyen probably went to Spain in 1534 and stayed there until 1540. He accompanied Emperor Charles V on the military expedition to and conquest of Tunis in 1535, and in 1538 he is referred to as ‘painter to His Royal Majesty’. In 1536 and 1538 the council of Brabant granted him the exclusive rights to publish prints of those events. Between 1546 and 1550 he designed a set of twelve tapestries for Mary of Hungary depicting scenes from the Tunis expedition, of which ten cartoons still survive in the Kunsthistorisches Museum in Vienna. The tapestries were woven between 1551 and 1553 in Brussels by Willem Pannemaker. Payments for paintings in the Church of the Abbey of St Vaast in Arras are documented from 1548, and as late as 1561, two years after his death, to his widow. He owned land in the north of Holland jointly with Jan van Scorel, and in 1552 was involved in a project to dam the river Zype and polder the area.
None of the paintings by Vermeyen that Van Mander describes have survived. In 1872 Houdoy published a list of paintings, mostly portraits, which Vermeyen completed for Margaret of Austria in the period 1525-30 (the artist requested payment for the materials used in making them in 1533). The diptych of which two wings are described below could be reconstructed as a work by the artist on the basis of this list. The Holy Family, probably the right panel of that diptych, is the only signed painting from his hand (SK-C-1701; see the entry on SK-A-4069). The Micault Triptych with The Raising of Lazarus in Brussels (Musées Royaux des Beaux-Arts; illustrated in ENP XII, 1975, no. 388, pls. 202-04), is securely attributed to Vermeyen and can be dated between 1547 and 1549. He made about 20 etchings, some of them dated 1545 and 1546, including various oriental subjects, which are signed with his ligated monogram ‘IC’. Apart from the cartoons and etchings, a group of portraits and a few remarkable night scenes (such as SK-A-4820) can be attributed to him.
References
Van Mander 1604, fols. 224v-25r; Houdoy 1872; Steinbart 1931; Friedländer XII, 1935, pp. 157-64; Boon in Thieme/Becker XXXIV, 1940, pp. 278-80; ENP XII, 1975, pp. 85-89; Horn 1989, I, pp. 5-40, II, pp. 339-411 (documents); Miedema III, 1996, pp. 132-40; Vermandere in Turner 1996, XXXII, pp. 271-72
(J.P. Filedt Kok)
It seems likely that the two panels discussed in this entry, the ‘Portrait of Erard de la Marck’ and the companion panel ‘The Holy Family’ (SK-C-1701) were painted by Jan Vermeyen for Margaret of Austria between 1528 and 1530. There is some debate as to whether they originally formed a diptych, with the portrait on the left. They would appear to be too large for a hinged diptych, but it is certainly conceivable that they belonged together as separate panels.
Cardinal Erard de la Marck (1472-1538), Prince-Bishop of Liège, is shown half-length. Over his red cassock he is wearing a dark red, fur-lined cloak with wide sleeves, and he has a red biretta on his head. Unlike the red cassock and red biretta, which are part of a cardinal’s official garb (although the usual sapphire ring is missing), the cloak is a secular garment that is mainly seen in the portraits of scholars. Two angels are holding up a green (now dark brown) curtain behind him, and the one on the right is gesturing to the right.8
Erard de la Marck was made Prince-Bishop of Liège in 1505, and since 1518 he had been an ally and financial backer of Emperor Charles V, and the trusted adviser of Regent Margaret of Austria. He became a cardinal in 1521. A cruel inquisitor, he was known not just as a sworn enemy of Protestantism but also as a generous patron of the arts.9 By building a bishop’s palace in Liège (1526-34) and awarding scores of monumental commissions (for more than 300 tapestries, among others), he was responsible for a flowering of Renaissance art in the city.10
The Holy Family is depicted with a brooding Joseph on the right and God the Father on a terrestrial globe with musician angels on the left. The Virgin Mary with the nude, standing, muscular Christ Child in close-up recalls Jan Gossart’s ‘Virgin and Child’ in Madrid.11 No direct model could be found for the two carnations in her hand, one red and one white. The thoughtful Joseph leaning forward behind the Virgin is based on a work by Raphael of c. 1518, also in Madrid, which also inspired Jan van Scorel. Vermeyen’s use of colour, his technique, the heavenly apparition of God the Father and the Child’s ‘contrapposto’ pose are all reminiscent of Scorel.12
‘The Holy Family’ is Vermeyen’s only signed painting. As Torringa acutely observed of the signature: ‘Rather than signing with the usual “pinxit”, Vermeyen chose the imperfect form of the verb, “pingebat”. In so doing he was following the example of Apelles, who signed this way as an expression of his modesty because he was never fully satisfied with his work’.13 Jan van Scorel also use the word in his signature on the ‘Frangipani triptych’ of 1519 in Obervellach.14 The letters ‘IC’ (in ligature) could stand for Vermeyen’s initials: I(ohannes) C(ornelisz).15
We assume that the two panels formed a diptych from the very outset, as described in the inventory of the possessions of Margaret of Austria (1480-1530). Between 1524 and 1530, several items were added to that inventory of 1523/24, including two panels of the same size by Jan Vermeyen: ‘Deux Tableaux Receuz de Maistre Jehan, le paintre, semblables; en l’ung est Nostre Dame et l’autre Monseigneur de Liège’ (Two paintings received from Master Jan, the painter, similar; in one is Our Lady, in the other Monsignor of Liège). In another version of this inventory the diptych is described as ‘Ung tableau, paint d’ung cousté d’une Nostre-Dame et de l’autre du cardinal de Liège, fermant à deux fuilletz.’ (A painting, painted with an Our Lady on one side and on the other the cardinal of Liège, two leaves closing).16 The second description makes it less likely that the diptych described in the inventory was a stationary one.
It emerges from a document of 1533 that Margaret of Austria commissioned two pairs of paintings with these subjects shortly before her death. In that year, Vermeyen wrote a letter to Margaret’s executors requesting overdue payment for the material costs of 19 paintings that he had delivered to her. They included ‘quatre grans tableaux a savoir: deux à la figure du cardinal de Liège et autres deux à l’ymage de Notre Dame [...], pour le bois, estoffes d’or, d’azur et autres’ (Four large paintings, namely two of the figure of the cardinal of Liège and the other two of the image of Our Lady [...], for the wood, gold, azurite and other materials). For this he charged ‘XX livres’.17 It is very conceivable that one of the pairs remained with Margaret as a diptych and was mentioned in her inventory, and that the other pair was given to Erard de la Marck, who may have ensured that it had a funerary function after his death.
The two paintings discussed here only resurfaced in two different places in Europe in the early decades of the 20th century, and were published as works by Jan Vermeyen. The man was identified as the Prince-Bishop of Liège and cardinal, Erard de la Marck, on the basis of the inscription on his etched bust-length portrait by Jan Vermeyen (fig. a), which is a faithful reversed copy of the painting. This made for a plausible attribution of the painted portrait to Vermeyen, and that was never called into question.18
‘The Holy Family’ appeared on the art market shortly before World War II, and in 1946 it became Dutch state property as a restituted work of art belonging to the Netherlands, and was given on loan to the Frans Hals Museum in 1948.
The first connection between the two panels and the documents associated with Margaret of Austria was made when the Rijksmuseum acquired the portrait in 1962. At the time, Haak ultimately rejected the possibility that the panels originally made up the diptych referred to in the documents: ‘once the two panels had been brought together it turned out that they were not sufficiently close to each other in colouring, composition or in style’.19
De la Marck’s pose, turned to the right, together with the angel on the right holding up the curtain and pointing to the right with its right hand, and the light that enters the portrait from the right, link the painting with the poses of the Holy Family turned to the left. The green curtain that extends into the panel with ‘The Holy Family’ supplies the visual connection between the two panels. The technical examination carried out in 2003/04 in preparation for the exhibition of diptychs held in Washington and Antwerp in 2006/07 and the associated conservation treatment of both paintings in 2006 provided a number of convincing arguments for the original connection between the panels. Not only are the painted surfaces nearly the same size, but the peach-coloured priming of both panels is the same, and it is not found anywhere else in Vermeyen’s oeuvre. Moreover, the paint structure of the curtain held up by the angels behind the cardinal, which extends into ‘The Holy Family’, is identical. In addition, the way in which both panels were deliberately disfigured with scratches, and later restored, are the same, which suggests that they have a common past.20
One notable feature is the contrast between the warm palette of the portrait and the rather cool colours in ‘The Holy Family’. However, both the summary underdrawing and the painting technique of both panels are closely related. In addition, as well as having the same peach-coloured priming, there is a similar draughtsman-like handling of the details and the highlights. What is also noteworthy is the use of gold leaf in the red carnation. It was employed in a similar way in other works by Vermeyen (see SK-A-4820). This, as well as the azurite used for the Virgin’s robe, is mentioned in the 1533 list of expenses for materials for paintings fitting this description.
An attempt to interpret the iconography of this putative diptych runs into a number of unresolved questions. The main one is that the cardinal is on the left rather than the right wing, which would be his customary position in a devotional diptych according to the hierarchical principle of dextrality. One parallel for this unconventional positioning is Jan Gossart’s diptych with Jean Carondelet of 1517.21 Van der Velden has pointed out that breaching the principle of dextrality presupposes opening the diptych at a 90° angle so that it can be viewed at an angle, with the donors facing the subject of their devotion, but there appears to be no question of that in this particular case.22 To the left of the Christ Child in ‘The Holy Family’ is the heavenly apparition of God the Father with musician angels. The question is whether this is a reference to the Child’s divine origins or a vision of the Holy Family experienced by the cardinal, in the same way that the Virgin and Child appear to Chancellor Rolin in a painting by Van Eyck in the Louvre. In the context of a diptych, the standing Child with his two outstretched fingers in ‘The Holy Family’ appears to be blessing the cardinal.23 The cardinal himself is not in an obviously devout or prayerful pose. One is tempted to see the eloquent gesture he is making with his hands in relation to the scene beside him as a dialogue with the divine apparition, but this would be unusual.24
Both paintings can be placed quite early in Vermeyen’s oeuvre, between 1528 and 1530, and situated in Mechelen, partly on the evidence of the documents mentioned above and of the similarities to the works painted by Jan van Scorel after his return from Italy.25
The prominence of the two angels holding up the curtain behind the cardinal has led to the suggestion that the portrait had a funerary connotation. Since the cardinal had installed his copper-gilt tomb in Liège’s St Lambertskerk in 1527, and in 1530 donated funds for an annual mass to be said in his memory, it is quite clear just how much care he took to ensure the salvation of his soul.26 If one assumes that Margaret of Austria commissioned Jan Vermeyen to paint Erard de la Marck, it cannot be a posthumous portrait. It is conceivable, though, that Margaret presented the cardinal with the diptych, and that after his death it was installed on his tomb or in a burial chapel. The defacement of both panels shows that the diptych was in a public place during an iconoclastic episode - a chapel, or even perhaps the bishop’s palace. There was no iconoclasm in Liège in the 16th century, but in the late 18th century a great deal of damage was done to church property in the city.27
Both paintings were severely damaged with a sharp implement. In the portrait the scratches are concentrated in the face, and the eyes were entirely obliterated. In ‘The Holy Family’ there are scratches in the figure of the Child, whose genitals were effaced, and in the Virgin’s face. Until 1938 there was a veil painted around the Child to conceal this damage.28 It can be deduced from photographs in the RKD that the veil was removed between 1937 and 1938.
The recent conservation treatment of the portrait revealed just how heavily it had been overpainted. Leaving aside the damage to the face, in which the eyes had been painted anew, the cardinal’s biretta had been completely overpainted and the red sleeve of his cloak largely so.29
There is a posthumous copy of the portrait in Liège, probably made in the 16th century, in which the angels are missing and to which the cardinal’s name and dates were added. The sleeves of the fur-trimmed cloak look a greenish blue, and the cassock is a transparent pink (discoloured red lake), but unfortunately the copy is not very accurate (fig. b).30
JPFK
Cohen 1910 (as Jan van Scorel); Friedländer 1926, p. 6, no. 29 (as Jan van Scorel); Wescher 1927 (as Jan van Scorel); Benesch 1929; Glück 1933, p. 197; Friedländer XII, 1935, pp. 157, 208, no. 390; Hoogewerff IV, 1941-42, pp. 265-67; Haak 1963; De Bruyn Kops 1970; ENP XII, 1975, pp. 85, 129, no. 390; Bruyn 1984, pp. 4-5; Kloek in Amsterdam 1986a, pp. 203-04, no. 78; Horn 1989, I, pp. 6-9, 11, 21, 33, II, p. 61; Van den Boogert in Utrecht-’s-Hertogenbosch 1993, p. 223, no. 221; Eichberger 2002, pp. 203, 379-80; Hand in Washington etc. 2006, pp. 236-39, 299-300, no. 35; Hendrikman 2007; Bagley-Young 2008
1976, p. 573, no. A 4069
J.P. Filedt Kok, 2010, 'Jan Cornelisz. Vermeyen, Portrait of Erard de la Marck (1472-1538), Mechelen, c. 1528 - c. 1530', in J.P. Filedt Kok (ed.), Early Netherlandish Paintings, online coll. cat. Amsterdam: hdl.handle.net/10934/RM0001.COLLECT.6424
(accessed 22 November 2024 22:49:25).