Object data
oil on canvas
support: height 200.3 cm × width 128.5 cm
outer size: depth 9.5 cm (support incl. frame)
Wybrand de Geest
c. 1632
oil on canvas
support: height 200.3 cm × width 128.5 cm
outer size: depth 9.5 cm (support incl. frame)
The support is a lined canvas with one horizontal seam approximately in the centre. Imprints of the original stretcher are visible. The tacking edges were cut, probably during lining. The ground layer is light in colour. The painting was smoothly executed with visible brushmarks throughout and impasto for highlights.
Fair. There are some areas of retouching and the varnish has yellowed.
? Commissioned by or for Hendrik Casimir I (1612-40); inventory Frisian Stadholder’s Court, Leeuwarden, 1681 (‘Conterfeitsel van prince Hendrich Casimir’);1...; first recorded in the museum in 1809;2 on loan to the Stedelijk Museum Het Prinsenhof, Delft, 1949-65
Object number: SK-A-569
Copyright: Public domain
Wybrand de Geest (Leeuwarden c. 1592 - Leeuwarden 1661/65)
Wybrand de Geest was probably born in Leeuwarden on 16 August 1592, going by the inscription on the back of his self-portrait (SK-A-1780) in the Rijksmuseum. It is likely that he received his initial training from his father, Simon Juckes de Geest, a glasspainter. It emerges from the contributions to his album amicorum that he trained with Abraham Bloemaert in Utrecht in 1613-14, and the same source shows that he travelled for seven years after completing his apprenticeship, and visited Paris and Aix-en-Provence. He spent most of his time in Rome, however, where he stayed from 1616. In the Schildersbent (Band of Painters) there he was given the nickname ‘The Frisian Eagle’, according to Houbraken because of his ‘high flight in art’. He was still in Rome in 1620, but was back in Leeuwarden in 1621, for in that year he painted the group portrait of the local Verspeeck family.3 He was to spend the rest of his life in Leeuwarden. A Catholic, he married before the magistrate on 19 October 1622, his bride being Hendrickje Uylenburgh. One of Hendrickje’s cousins was the father of Saskia, Rembrandt’s wife. De Geest moved in lofty circles, was himself not without means, served as a regent of a charitable institution in 1639, and bore a coat of arms. His children and grandchildren even felt that they belonged to the Frisian aristocracy. His praises were sung by the poet Joost van den Vondel while he was still alive, and several eulogies were written about portraits of his. It is not known when he died, but it was between 1661 and 1665. His last works date from 1660, and there is also a letter he wrote in 1661. In 1665 his wife was recorded as being a widow.
Although Houbraken called him a ‘fine history and portrait painter’, almost all his surviving works are portraits. After his return from Rome he became the favourite portrait painter of Ernst Casimir of Nassau-Dietz (later Stadholder of Friesland) and his wife Sophia Hedwig of Braunschweig-Wolfenbüttel, of their son Hendrik Casimir, and of the landed aristocracy of Friesland. Fragments from the diaries of Hendrik’s brother, Willem Frederik, record that he visited De Geest on more than one occasion ‘to have myself painted’. De Geest must have had a studio with assistants, given the many commissions he received, of which copies were often made. His pupils included Jacob Potma (c. 1610-80) and his son Julius Franciscus de Geest (?-1699). In the course of 40 years his portraiture evolved from the solemn, formal manner of Van Mierevelt and Van Ravesteyn to a more modern, fashionable style.
Yvette Bruijnen, 2007
References
Houbraken I, 1718, pp. 147-48; Campo Weyerman I, 1729, pp. 377-78; Descamps I, 1753, pp. 402-03; Hofstede de Groot 1889a; Hofstede de Groot in Thieme/Becker XIII, 1920, pp. 331-33; Wassenbergh 1967, pp. 37-40; De Vries 1982, pp. 9-11; Visser/Van der Plaat 1995, pp. 375, 479; De Vries in Turner 1996, XII, p. 233
Wybrand de Geest painted many portraits for the court of Friesland in the 1620s and 30s, including monumental full-lengths of Ernst Casimir (SK-A-570) and Sophia Hedwig, Duchess of Braunschweig-Wolfenbüttel.4 This likeness of Hendrik Casimir I is a typical example of state portraits of that kind.
The sitter was born in 1612 as the son of Ernst Casimir and Sophia Hedwig. In 1620, while still a minor, he was made Provincial Commander of the Teutonic Knights, bailiff of Utrecht, and was appointed colonel of the infantry in 1631. In 1632 he succeeded his father as Stadholder of Friesland, Drenthe and Groningen. He was shot and mortally wounded at the Battle of Hulst in 1640.5
Hendrik Casimir is portrayed here as a stadholder, and there is an unmistakable similarity to the portrait of his father and predecessor, Ernst Casimir (SK-A-570). Both are depicted as military commanders wearing a cuirass, sword and spurred boots, with a plumed helmet on the table beside them. Hendrik is wearing the cross of the Teutonic Knights around his neck,6 and rests his right hand on his commander’s baton. He is shown as a young man, so a date around his succession to the stadholdership in 1632 is plausible.
Van Thiel assumed that the present portrait was listed in the 1633 inventory of the possessions of the court in Leeuwarden,7 but since that one is under the heading ‘Here follow the children’ those must have been portraits of children, which this most certainly is not. Listed under the heading ‘Paintings, portraits’ in the 1681 inventory of the same court is a ‘Portrait of Prince Hendrik Casimir’, which may be a reference to the one now in the Rijksmuseum.8
As with the monumental portrait of Ernst Casimir, many small studio versions were made of this composition, including an unsigned one now in Paleis Het Loo.9
Yvette Bruijnen, 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. 81.
Wassenbergh 1967, p. 35, no. 37; Van Thiel 1981a, pp. 189-90, no. 41; Arnold in Bilzen 1992, pp. 92-93, no. II.2.3
1809, p. 94, no. 448 (as Anonymous); 1843, p. 77, no. 403 (as Anonymous; ‘a piece inserted at the bottom’); 1853, p. 36, no. 390 (as Anonymous; fl. 500); 1858, p. 184, no. 406 (as Anonymous); 1880, p. 102, no. 93; 1887, p. 49, no. 384; 1903, p. 103, no. 955; 1934, p. 105, no. 955; 1976, p. 238, no. A 569; 2007, no. 81
Y. Bruijnen, 2007, 'Wybrand de (I) Geest, Portrait of Hendrik Casimir I (1612-40), Count of Nassau-Dietz, c. 1632', in J. Bikker (ed.), Dutch Paintings of the Seventeenth Century in the Rijksmuseum, online coll. cat. Amsterdam: hdl.handle.net/10934/RM0001.COLLECT.8466
(accessed 22 November 2024 18:27:44).