Object data
oil on panel
support: height 98.3 cm × width 73.3 cm
outer size: depth 7.5 cm (support incl. frame)
Nicolaes Eliasz Pickenoy
1627
oil on panel
support: height 98.3 cm × width 73.3 cm
outer size: depth 7.5 cm (support incl. frame)
The oval panel consists of three vertically grained oak planks and is bevelled on all sides. The ground is white. This portrait is less thinly painted than its pendant, slightly more opaque and smooth. Undermodelling was used primarily to suggest shadow, and mid-tones were carefully blended between highlight and shadow.
Fair. The varnish is discoloured.
? Commissioned by or for the sitters; ? their daughter, Maria Rey (c. 1631-1703), Amsterdam; ? her eldest son, Hendrick Meulenaer (1650-1704), Amsterdam; ? his daughter, Maria Meulenaer (1678-1743), Amsterdam; ? her husband, Pieter Schout Muilman (1672-1757), Amsterdam; ? his son, Dionis Muilman (1702-72), Amsterdam; ? his younger brother, Nicolaas Muilman (1709-90), Amsterdam; ? his eldest son, Henric Muilman (1743-1812), Amsterdam; ? his son, Willem Ferdinand Mogge Muilman (1778-1849), Amsterdam; ? his wife, Magdalena Antonia Muilman (1788-1853), Amsterdam; ? her daughter, Anna Maria van de Poll-Mogge Muilman (1811-78), Amsterdam; her stepson, Jacobus Salomon Hendrik van de Poll (1837-80), Amsterdam; by whom bequeathed to the museum, 18801
Object number: SK-A-698
Credit line: Jonkheer J.S.H. van de Poll Bequest, Amsterdam
Copyright: Public domain
Nicolaes Eliasz Pickenoy (Amsterdam 1588 - Amsterdam 1650/56)
Nicolaes Eliasz Pickenoy was born in Amsterdam in 1588 as the eldest son of the armorial stonemason Elias Claesz Pickenoy and his wife Heijltje Laurens s’Jonge, both of whom were born in Antwerp. In 1621 the painter married Levina Bouwens. In 1629 and 1634 Pickenoy was warden of the Guild of St Luke. He died between May 1650 and October 1656. Pickenoy was a successful artist, with an oeuvre numbering dozens of individual portraits, as well as groups of regents and civic guardsmen. A very different part of his output consists of several paintings of mythological and religious subjects, including a Christ and the Woman Taken in Adultery.2
Stylistic evidence suggests that he was trained by Cornelis van der Voort, the most influential portrait painter in Amsterdam in the 1610s and 20s. Pickenoy’s earliest known work is The Anatomy Lesson of Dr Sebastiaen Egbertsz de Vrij of 1619.3 Despite competition from artists like Rembrandt and Thomas de Keyser, Pickenoy was the leading portraitist in Amsterdam in the 1630s – a position he lost in the 1640s to Bartholomeus van der Helst, who may have been his pupil. In that period, though, he did make a few very large civic guard pieces, among them Officers and Other Civic Guardsmen of the IVth District of Amsterdam, under the Command of Captain Jan Claesz van Vlooswijck and Lieutenant Gerrit Hudde of 1642 (SK-C-1177).
Everhard Korthals Altes, 2007
References
Six 1886, pp. 81-108; Lelienfeld in Thieme/Becker X, 1914, p. 458; Dudok van Heel 1985, pp. 152-60; Ekkart in Amsterdam 1993, p. 313; Briels 1997, p. 368
The attribution of this pendant pair to Pickenoy is very persuasive. One feature of his style is the relatively soft modelling. Both portraits are dated 1627, when according to the inscriptions Maerten Reijnertsz Rey (1595/96-1632) (shown here) was 32 years old and his wife (see SK-A-699), Maria Joachimsdr Swartenhont (1598-1631), 27.
Maerten Rey and Maria Swartenhont married in 1617 and had three daughters.4 Rey was a wine merchant and steward of the Crossbowmen’s Hall. He is shown halflength turned to the right, and in his right hand he is holding up a rummer of white wine. Quite a few portraits from the early 17th century show men with a glass in the hand, such as Cornelis Ketel’s portrait of the wine-gauger Vincent Jacobsen.5 Ketel and Pickenoy were not painting a merry drinker or an allegory of Taste, but a portrait of a man with an attribute of his trade.
What is remarkable is the oval shape of the two portraits. On the back of one of the panels are traces that point to the use of a pair of compasses, which the panel maker may have used to saw a proper oval. However, it is not possible to say for certain whether the shape is original.
Life-size oval portraits were exceptional in the Netherlands in the 1620s, and there are very few of them even in Pickenoy’s oeuvre.6 It was only in the 1630s that the type became popular, chiefly in Amsterdam, where Rembrandt used it several times.7
It looks as if Pickenoy made the pose fit the oval shape. The heads of the figures are situated high up in the picture, and much of the bodies are visible. Pickenoy was very successful in imparting liveliness to his sitters. In the man’s portrait that is largely due to the glass of wine he is holding up close to the edge of the picture. The glove that the woman is holding in her portrait is actually cut off by the edge.
The paintings remained with the family for a long time before being bequeathed to the Rijksmuseum at the end of the 19th century.8
Everhard Korthals Altes, 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. 233.
Six 1886, p. 87; Frederiks 1887, pp. 272-73 (as Thomas de Keyser); Kolleman 1971, p. 115
1880, p. 484, nos. 185b, 185c (as Thomas de Keyser); 1887, p. 43, nos. 338, 339; 1903, p. 95, nos. 894, 895; 1934, p. 95, nos. 894, 895; 1960, pp. 94-95, nos. 894, 895; 1976, p. 218, nos. A 698, A 699; 2007, no. 233
E. Korthals Altes, 2007, 'Nicolaes Eliasz. Pickenoy, Portrait of Maerten Rey (1595/96-1632), 1627', in J. Bikker (ed.), Dutch Paintings of the Seventeenth Century in the Rijksmuseum, online coll. cat. Amsterdam: hdl.handle.net/10934/RM0001.COLLECT.6991
(accessed 27 December 2024 13:12:51).