Object data
oil on copper
support: height 44 cm × width 62 cm
outer size: depth 10 cm (support incl. frame)
Hendrik de Clerck, Denis van Alsloot
c. 1600 - c. 1615
oil on copper
support: height 44 cm × width 62 cm
outer size: depth 10 cm (support incl. frame)
…; sale, Michiel van Hoeken, Theodoor Hartsoeker (1696-1740/41) and Dirk ter Hoeve, The Hague (auction house not known), 1 May 1742, no. 7 (‘Het Oordeel van Midas door Clerk, vol Beelden en Bywerk, het beste van hem bekent, h. l. v 5 d., br. 2 v. [44.5 x 62.8 cm]’), fl. 305;1…; ? Hendrik van Heteren (1672-1749), The Hague;2 his son Adriaan Leonard van Heteren (1724-1800), The Hague, (‘Het Oordeel van Midas, tusschen Apollo en Pan door Sebastiaan Le Clerq en de Fluweele Bruegel, h. 17. d., br. 24 d. [44.5 x 62.8 cm], K’);3 his third cousin and godson, Adriaan Leonard van Heteren Gevers (1794-1866), Rotterdam, (‘Le Clerq. Répresentant Le Jugement de Midas qui préfère le chant de Dieur Pan sur celui d Apollon, cuivre h. 17 l. 23½ pouces [46 x 49.5 cm]’);4 from whom, fl. 100,000, with 136 other paintings en bloc (known as the ‘Kabinet van Heteren Gevers’), to the museum, by decree of Lodewijk Napoleon King of Holland, and through the mediation of his father Dirk Cornelis Gevers (1763-1839), 8 June 18095
Object number: SK-A-621
Copyright: Public domain
Hendrik de Clerck ((?) Brussels c. 1560-70 - Brussels 1630)
Little is known about Hendrik de Clerck, chiefly credited today for the altarpieces he executed mainly for churches in Brussels following the iconoclasm of the 1570s. He is first heard of as the signatory to a statement made in Rome, concerning a domestic dispute, on 11 February 1587.6 There it was stated that he had lived and worked in the house of the artist Frans van den Kasteele (Francesco da Castello, c. 1540-1621) for over a year. Van den Kasteele was from Brussels, and that De Clerck was lodging with him is evidence, albeit not strong, that he too may have been a native of that city.
Descamps placed his birth in 1570,7 a view which Laureyssens does not dismiss.8 But sixteen might seem improbably young to undertake a journey from the Netherlands to Rome. Thus the year of De Clerck’s birth is here calculated as between 1560 and 1570.9
There is no record of De Clerck’s apprenticeship. It seems generally agreed that he was not trained in Brussels. Descamps states that he was the pupil of Maerten de Vos (1532-1603), the leading artist in Antwerp and dean of the guild there in 1572. There is an affinity between their styles.
It is now known that De Clerck drew extensive views of Rome and made a journey south to Naples.10 That he established a reputation while in Italy is suggested by his work being collected by Cardinal Granvelle, statesman to the Habsburgs and notable art collector, who died in 1586.11 De Clerck’s reputation must have preceded him to Brussels, for he soon received a prestigious commission for an altarpiece for Onze-Lieve-Vrouwe-ter-Kapellekerk, a triptych, completed in 1590, which is his largest extant work measuring 302 by 212 cm overall.12
That he received official recognition during the governorship of Prince Alessandro Farnese, Duke of Parma and Governor of the Spanish Netherlands, who died in 1592, seems a possibility. Certainly he was appointed court painter by Farnese’s successor, Archduke Ernest (1553-1595), and was recommended in turn to his successor the Archduke Albert (1559-1621).13 De Clerck’s eminence was then such that he provided designs for the tableaux set up in Brussels as part of the decorations for the Joyous Entry of the Archduke Albert in 1596 and for those of Archduke Albert and Infanta Isabella in 1599.14
De Bie praises De Clerck’s work in both large and small formats.15 Notable among the latter are those he executed in collaboration with Denis van Alsloot (1570-1626) of which some twenty-one are extant (e.g. SK-A-621, see below).16 Of his altarpieces, most noteworthy are perhaps those which he executed for Onze-Lieve-Vrouwe-ter-Kapellekerk. His last dated altarpiece for the Sint-Pieters-en-Guidokerk at Anderlecht was of 1628.17
In 1590, De Clerk had been elected ‘prince’ of Brussels chamber of rhetoric De Corenbloem; in the following year he married and fathered at least eight children two of whom became painters.18 In 1663 they sold some 350 of their father’s workshop drawings in 1663 to Baron Waldburg of Wolfegg.19
The artist’s last residence in Brussels was in the Nicolaysstraat; he was buried in the nearby Sint-Gorikskerk on 27 August 1630.
REFERENCES
Laureyssens in J. Turner (ed.), The Dictionary of Art, 34 vols., Basingstoke 1996, VII, pp. 413-14; Sapori in Saur Allgemeines Künstlerlexikon: Die Bildenden Künstler aller Zeiten und Völker, Munich/Leipzig 1983-, XIX, pp. 521-23
Correctly described as ‘The Judgement of Midas’ in the eighteenth century and in the Koninklijk Museum catalogue of 1809, the subject of this painting was given as the Contest between Apollo and the Satyr Marsyas in all the Rijksmuseum catalogues between 1903 and 1992. But it certainly does not portray the contest of Apollo and Marsyas which is briefly described by Ovid in Metamorphoses VI:382-86. Honders pointed out in a letter to the museum in 1985 (as was further elaborated by Smeets in 1991), that the scene illustrates Metamorphoses XI:146-79 which recounts how Midas, King of Phrygia, having been released from his wish that everything he touched be turned to gold, prompted a musical contest between the half-goat Pan, god of the woods and shepherds, and Apollo, the sun god. Pan wearing a wreath of pine needles, having played his pipes, gesticulates vaingloriously as Apollo, wearing a laurel crown and inspired by the goddess Minerva, plays not the lyre – as specified in Ovid’s text – but a viola da braccia. Wearing a crown of oak leaves, Tmolus, the judge and eponymous god of the mountain on which the contest took place, turns towards Apollo, as does Midas, who displays his stupidity by showing his preference for Pan’s playing. Apollo punished him by awarding him ‘the ears of a sluggard ass’ depicted growing up alongside his crown.20
The Rijksmuseum picture was already recognized as a work of collaboration in the Van Heteren catalogue of 1752 – where the wrong [De] Clerck was mistakenly specified and the landscape was attributed to Jan Brueghel I – yet its authorship has only recently been established. In the modern era, while Hendrik de Clerck has been long associated with it, the identity of his collaborator – Denis van Alsloot (1570-1626) – was first hinted at by Smeets,21 and then accepted by Laureyssens.22 And indeed The Contest of Apollo and Pan is evidently the work of these two artists. The core, but not definitive number of twenty-one such joint productions, eight of which are dated 1608-12, was published by Laureyssens in 1967.23 Noteworthy is Minerva’s helmet as it is set askew on her head.
The picture is likely to have been executed around 1610-15 as there are formal similarities with another work of the same subject, dated 1611, on the Munich art market in 196724 and with a Rest on the Flight into Egypt of the same date, on the London art market in 1990, which includes two angels similar to the putti about to endow Apollo with the victor’s crown.25 However, in both these works the landscape is far more extensive and the figures are smaller in proportion. In this respect, the present picture is reminiscent of the two artists’ earlier collaborative efforts; that being so there is also an affinity in the rendering of the figures with those in the Four Elements of 1613.26
De Clerck may have been inspired by Hendrik Goltzius’s (1558-1617) print of 1590,27 where the muses are introduced as part of the enactment. De Clerck depicts only seven women, three of whom hold trumpets and one a book, so they might be identified as Euterpe (music), Calliope (epic poetry), Polyhymnia (heroic hymns), and Clio (history). But as there are not nine female figures, De Clerck’s intentions remain unclear; perhaps he may have introduced the seven for decorative reasons only. The three who hold trumpets might be doing so in readiness of celebrating Pan’s likely victory of which he had boasted, as McGrath has kindly suggested.28
De Clerck’s composition is far more static than that of Goltzius, and it may be that, in this respect, he was influenced by Raphael’s Parnassus, as engraved by Marcantonio Raimondi (c. 1480-1527/1534), from whose print29 De Clerck borrowed the pose of Apollo. It may be too that he was influenced by late maniera painting in Rome such as Jacopo Zucchi’s Coral Fishing (Galleria Borghese)30 which was probably painted about the time when De Clerck was there.
Van Cauteren has suggested that in the personage of Apollo De Clerck intended an allusion to the Archduke, Albert of Austria (1559-1621), co-sovereign with his wife, Isabella Clara Eugenia (1566-1633), of the Netherlands.31 Indeed the god is here endowed with an aureole and is thus configured as Phoebus Apollo, the sun god with whom sovereigns – the archduke being no exception – were often rhetorically associated. Apollo is advised in his successful conduct of the contest by his twin sister the powerful Minerva, goddess of wisdom. That the red and white plumes which decorate her helmet are the colours of the House of Austria may therefore not be fortuitous, but the meaning of the allegory, if such was indeed intended, still requires clarification.
The unusual use of gold leaf as a second ground has been so far detected in several seventeenth-century northern Netherlandish paintings on copper, the earliest of which are three Rembrandts executed before 1630 – the Mauritshuis Laughing Man, the Stockholm Self Portrait, and the Salzburg Artist’s Mother.32 The reason for it remains uncertain.33 It seems unlikely that De Clerck invented this particular method of preparation in the southern Netherlands; other earlier examples may yet come to light.
Gregory Martin, 2022
Laureyssens in Saur Allgemeines Künstlerlexikon: Die Bildenden Künstler aller Zeiten und Völker, Munich/Leipzig 1983-, II, p. 370; Sapori in ibid, XIX, p. 522
1809, p. 14, no. 57 (as Clerq (le), Judgement of Midas); 1886, p. 114, no. 516d; 1903, p. 72, no. 695 (as Hendrick de Clerck, Contest between Apollo and Marsyas); 1934, p. 71, no. 695 (as Hendrick de Clerck); 1976, p. 169, no. A 621 (as Hendrick de Clerck II); 1992, p. 47, no. A 621 (as Hendrick de Clerck II, Contest between Apollo and Pan)
G. Martin, 2022, 'Hendrik de Clerck and Denis van Alsloot, The Contest between Apollo and Pan, c. 1600 - c. 1615', in Flemish Paintings in the Rijksmuseum, online coll. cat. Amsterdam: hdl.handle.net/10934/RM0001.COLLECT.8145
(accessed 28 December 2024 18:02:41).