Object data
oil on panel
support: height 71.5 cm × width 61 cm
outer size: depth 5.5 cm (support incl. frame)
Abraham de Vries
1640
oil on panel
support: height 71.5 cm × width 61 cm
outer size: depth 5.5 cm (support incl. frame)
The support consists of three vertically grained oak planks and has shallow bevels on the right and left sides. The support was prepared with a red ground, visible at the reserve of the collar. The paint layers were applied very smoothly, with fine brushstrokes used to define individual hairs. Impasto highlights were used for the edges of the lace collar and to lend the eyes a moist appearance.
Fair. There is a small crack at the top centre of the panel. The varnish is very discoloured.
? Commissioned by or for the sitter, David de Moor (1598-1643), Amsterdam; ? his brother, Bernard de Moor (1588-1666), Amsterdam; ? his widow, Clara van de Capelle (1607-75), Amsterdam; ? her son, Bernard de Moor II (1641-1719), Utrecht; ? his widow, Anna Catharina van den Boogaard (1656-1726), Utrecht; ? her daughter, Anna Catharina de Moor (1676-1746), Utrecht; ? her daughter, Anna Catharina van Roijen (1701-60), Utrecht; ? her widower, Petrus van der Hagen (1700-62), Utrecht; ? his son, Johannes van der Hagen (1730-1810), Utrecht and Nieuw Maarseveen; ? his daughter, Johanna Petronella van der Hagen (1773-1826), Utrecht; ? her widower, Hendrik Adriaan van den Heuvel (1766-1840), Utrecht and The Hague; ? his son, Bernard Louis Carel van der Hagen van den Heuvel (1797-1862), Utrecht and Kreuznach; his widow, Albertina Johanna Henrietta à Nijeholt (1794-1866), IJsselstein;1 her daughter, Carolina Mathilda Henrietta van den Heuvel (1828-80), Utrecht; her sale, Amsterdam (C.F. Roos et al.), 20 October 1880, no. 204, fl. 397, to the museum2
Object number: SK-A-758
Copyright: Public domain
Abraham de Vries (? The Hague c. 1590/95 - ? The Hague c. 1648/50)
Abraham de Vries’s early life is sketchy, and nothing is known about his training. Although his place of birth is given in the older literature as Katendrecht (near Rotterdam), when he joined the painters’ guild in The Hague in 1644 he paid the low fee natives of the town were charged. In the absence of documents, his date of birth can only be surmised from his dated works, the earliest of which is a landscape drawing from 1613.3 According to the inscription on this drawing, it was executed in Lyon. De Vries is documented in Rotterdam in 1617. His earliest dated painting is the 1621 Self-Portrait in the Rijksmuseum, which was probably also executed outside of the United Provinces as it is signed ‘A. de Vries Batavus’ (A. de Vries, Dutchman). In 1623, he was in Aix-en-Provence, where he portrayed a local magistrate.4 Thanks to the preserved correspondence of the French humanist Nicolas Claude Fabri de Peiresc, whom De Vries apparently befriended in Aix, we are well informed of the artist’s – quite frequent – movements during the rest of the 1620s. De Vries was in Aix in 1624, Montpellier and probably Béziers and Toulouse in 1625, Bordeaux in 1626, and Paris in 1627-28. From Paris, he travelled to Antwerp, where a letter of recommendation from Peiresc secured a meeting with Rubens. From documents and, especially, the inscriptions on his paintings it is known that the 1630s and 40s were also quite restless decades for the artist. In the 1630s, he was mostly active in Paris and Antwerp, joining the painters’ guild in the latter city in 1634, but also briefly in Amsterdam where his brother Isaac lived and where he portrayed the Regents of the City Orphanage in 1633.5 Between 1639 and 1643, he was in Rotterdam, after which he settled in The Hague.
In 1648, De Vries made a will, and he probably died in the same or in the following year. Payment for a portrait of Maria Elisabeth II, Marchioness of Bergen, by an artist identified simply as ‘De Vries’ was made in 1649 or 1650 not to the artist himself, but to a certain Sara de Vries. The latter may well have been the daughter of Abraham de Vries’s brother Isaac, who was born in Amsterdam in 1623.6
Except for one history piece, a depiction of St Jerome inspired by Ter Brugghen that was probably painted in France in the 1620s,7 De Vries’s extant oeuvre is composed of portraits. His work is quite varied in style as he constantly absorbed new impulses from the leading artists in the different centres in which he worked.
Among the evidence suggesting that he was held in high regard are two portraits that De Vries executed of his fellow artists, the Antwerp painter Simon de Vos, and the Amsterdam painter Gillis de Hondecoeter.8
Jonathan Bikker, 2007
References
Obreen III, 1880-81, p. 258; V, 1882-83, pp. 77, 102; Ruelens 1882 (letters from Peiresc); coll. cat. Rotterdam 1892, p. 268; Haverkorn van Rijsewijk 1901, p. 61; Hannema 1928, p. 433; Foucart 1980; Van Mosselveld 1982, pp. 68, 70, note 7; Ekkart in coll. cat. Rotterdam 1995, p. 198; Löffler in The Hague 1998, p. 358; Ekkart 2005b
The name of the sitter, David de Moor, is painted on the reverse of the panel. Because the place of execution, Rotterdam, is inscribed on the front of the panel, an attempt was made in 1970 to identify him with a citizen of that city. However, a search in the Rotterdam baptismal, marriage and burial registers as well as the notarial archives for the period, produced no results.9 It can now be established that the sitter was indeed not a citizen of Rotterdam, but of Amsterdam. The present portrait was purchased at the posthumous sale of Carolina Mathilda Henrietta van den Heuvel in 1880.10 Other portraits in this sale were of Bernard de Moor (1588-1666) and his wife Clara van de Capelle (1607-75), the brother and sister-in-law of the Amsterdam David de Moor. Portraits of his parents, Jacob de Moor (1539-99) and Elisabeth Ruyschenberg (1555-1635), were also included in the sale.11 As can be seen in the reconstruction of the inheritance of the Portrait of David de Moor, Carolina M.H. van den Heuvel was a descendant of Bernard de Moor. This reconstruction finds some additional support in the mention of two other portraits in the 1880 sale catalogue, those of Bernard de Moor II (1641-1719) and his wife, Anna Catharina van den Boogaard (1656-1726).
The youngest of seven children of the surgeon Jacob de Moor, David de Moor was born in Dordrecht on 5 March 1598.12 He moved with his mother and siblings to Amsterdam sometime after the death of his father in Dordrecht in 1599. The family was apparently Catholic. According to his own account, David de Moor converted to the Reformed faith on 14 May 1612 in the house of the minister Jacobus Trigland, and was baptized in the Nieuwe Kerk by Gosuinus Geldorpius a few days later.13 By profession, De Moor was an accountant and merchant dealing in Silesian wool (‘Silesier garen’).14 David de Moor died in Amsterdam on 28 June 1643. He never married, which explains the orientation of his pose in De Vries’s portrait; if the painting had had a female pendant, De Moor would most likely have been shown turned in three-quarter profile to the viewer’s right, that is, in the opposite direction of how he appears in the museum’s portrait.
David de Moor’s link with Rotterdam was perhaps based on family relations. His sister, Anneken de Moor, was married to the jeweller Aert de Coninck, and among their children were the painters Jacob (1614/15-after 1690) and Philips Koninck (1619-88). David de Moor was not only an uncle of these painters, he became Philips’s guardian after the death of Aert de Coninck in 1639.15 Both Jacob and Philips Koninck were living in Rotterdam in 1640, which is when David de Moor sat for Abraham de Vries. It is tempting to speculate that it was the wedding of Philips Koninck and Cornelia Furnerius on 1 January 1641 that brought David de Moor to Rotterdam.
The extremely detailed treatment of the present portrait is typical of De Vries’s production in the last decade of his career. The folds of the ruff are meticulously described, and individual hairs of the sitter’s beard and hair have been rendered with a fine brush. The swollen eyelids and somewhat sfumato handling of the face are also characteristic. Sumowski has pointed out the similarities between a painting by De Vries showing a bearded man in fantasy costume with the work of Salomon Koninck.16 Indeed, the handling of the Portrait of David de Moor also has much in common with Salomon Koninck’s fijnschilder approach.
The identification of the sitter in the present portrait provides circumstantial evidence that Abraham de Vries was in contact with this younger artist during his stay in Amsterdam in the early 1630s. It has long been assumed that Salomon Koninck (1609-56) was related to Jacob and Philips Koninck, although the exact relationship has eluded clarification.17 Like Jacob and Philips’s father, Aert de Coninck, Salomon’s father, Pieter, was a goldsmith and jeweller in Amsterdam, where he died in 1627.18 Among the documents suggesting that Salomon Koninck was indeed related to Jacob and Philips is the 1639 inventory of Aert de Coninck’s estate, which was drawn up under Salomon’s supervision.19 Significantly, as it demonstrates direct contact between the two men, David de Moor, who was appointed executor of Aert de Coninck’s estate, was also present when the inventory was made. It seems quite possible, therefore, that it was an association between Abraham de Vries and Salomon Koninck, and possibly also with Philips and Jacob Koninck, that led David de Moor to commission the present portrait.
Jonathan Bikker, 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. 331.
1887, p. 186, no. 1595; 1903, p. 291, no. 2601; 1934, p. 310, no. 2601; 1976, p. 591, no. A 758; 2007, no. 331
J. Bikker, 2007, 'Abraham de Vries, Portrait of David de Moor (1598-1643), 1640', in J. Bikker (ed.), Dutch Paintings of the Seventeenth Century in the Rijksmuseum, online coll. cat. Amsterdam: hdl.handle.net/10934/RM0001.COLLECT.6496
(accessed 15 November 2024 16:18:12).