Object data
oil on canvas
support: height 131.5 cm × width 114.5 cm × thickness 3.5 cm (support incl. backboard)
outer size: depth 7.3 cm (support incl. frame)
Paulus Bor, Cornelis Hendriksz Vroom
c. 1635 - c. 1638
oil on canvas
support: height 131.5 cm × width 114.5 cm × thickness 3.5 cm (support incl. backboard)
outer size: depth 7.3 cm (support incl. frame)
The support is a plain-weave canvas that has been lined. Because of the discoloured varnish, any possible cusping cannot be detected. Nor is it possible to determine the colour of the ground layer or layers. The paint was finely applied with minimal brushmarking.
Fair. There are some small paint losses on the right side of the canvas and on the back of the female figure on the right. The figures are abraded, and there are a number of discoloured overpaints in the sky and the backs of the two foreground figures and the figure holding the infant Moses. The varnish has discoloured considerably and is uneven.
? Commissioned by or for Constantijn Huygens (1596-1687), Plein, The Hague; ? his son, Constantijn Huygens II (1628-97), with the house on Plein, The Hague;1 ? his son, Constantijn Huygens III (1674-1704), with the house on Plein, The Hague;2 ? his mother, Susanna Rijckaert (1642-1712), with the house on Plein, The Hague;3 ? her sister-in-law, Susanna Huygens (1637-1725), with the house on Plein, The Hague;4 ? her daughter, Philippina Doublet (1672-1746), with the house on Plein, The Hague;5 ? her daughter, Susanna Louisa Huygens (1714-85), with the house on Plein, The Hague;6 ? her estate inventory, The Hague, 31 March 1786 (‘De vinding van Moses’);7 ? purchased by Jacob Verheije van Citters (1675-1739), with the house on Plein, 12 February 1787;8 purchased by Jonkheer Johannes Goldberg (1763-1828), with the house on Plein, The Hague, 15 April 1800;9 description of his house on Plein, The Hague, 1827, as an overdoor by [Jacob van] Spreeuwen;10 purchased by the State, with the house on Plein, The Hague, 5 January 1829;11 transferred to the Nederlandsch Museum voor Geschiedenis en Kunst, The Hague (inv. no. 116), 1874; transferred to the museum, as J.G. van Bronckhorst, February 1885
Object number: SK-A-852
Copyright: Public domain
Paulus Bor (Amersfoort c. 1601 - Amersfoort 1669)
Paulus Bor stated in a document of 1625 that he was 24 years old, which means he was born around 1601. He was the son of a rich Catholic family in Amersfoort. It is not known who his teacher was, although a number of scholars have argued that it was Jacob van Campen. Bor’s oeuvre is stylistically related to that of Van Campen, who owned an estate close to Amersfoort. There is a possibility, though, that Bor influenced Van Campen as well.12 In addition to the Haarlem classicists, the Utrecht Caravaggisti also influenced Bor’s style. He is documented in Rome between 1623 and 1625, where he received the Bent nickname ‘Orlando’. Bor returned to Amersfoort around 1626, where he joined the Guild of St Luke in 1630. In 1632 he married Aleijda van Crachtwijck. Although he painted works between 1636 and 1638 for Frederik Hendrik’s hunting palace, Honselaarsdijk, he was not involved in other projects for the stadholder. Bor died on 10 August 1669. His extant oeuvre of about 25 paintings includes portraits and still lifes, but most of them are history pieces, often of arcane subjects (SK-A-4666 for example). Only four works are dated: the 1628 Portrait of the Van Vanevelt Family;13 a Vanitas Still Life of 1630,14 the 1641 Pretiose, Don Juan and the Gypsy Woman Maiombe,15 and the 1656 overmantel The Pot.16
Jonathan Bikker, 2007
References
Hoogewerff 1942, pp. 232, 233-34; Bok in Utrecht-Braunschweig 1986, pp. 224-25
Cornelis Hendricksz Vroom (Haarlem c. 1590/91 - Haarlem 1661)
The year of Cornelis Vroom’s birth can be deduced from a document of February 1649 in which he declared himself to be ‘about 58 years old’. His father and teacher was the famous marine painter Hendrick Cornelisz Vroom. Cornelis Vroom’s earliest dated work is a marine of 1615.17 Around 1620 he abandoned marine painting in favour of landscapes. His earliest work in this genre is from 1622.18 Willem Buytewech and Esaias and Jan van de Velde influenced his early landscape oeuvre, which is also often reminiscent of Adam Elsheimer’s work. Although he probably joined much earlier, the first record of his membership in the painters’ guild in Haarlem is from 1635. By 1641 he withdrew from the guild, but continued painting in Haarlem. In 1638 Vroom received payment for executing the landscapes in paintings by Paulus Bor (as shown here) and Moyses van Wtenbrouck for Frederik Hendrik’s hunting palace of Honselaarsdijk. At the start of his career he apparently collaborated with his father,19 and he continued to do so with other artists throughout his life. Samuel Ampzing mentioned him in 1621, and sang his praises in 1628. Theodoor Schrevelius placed him above all other Haarlem landscape painters.
Jonathan Bikker, 2007
References
Ampzing 1621, fol. E3; Ampzing 1628, p. 368; Schrevelius 1648, p. 389; Thieme/Becker XXXIV, 1940, p. 581; Keyes 1975, I, pp. 13-16; Giltaij in Rotterdam-Berlin 1996, p. 95; Van Thiel-Stroman 2006, pp. 328-31
The landscape in this painting has been convincingly attributed to the Haarlem artist Cornelis Vroom by both Keyes and Biesboer.20 Keyes compared the lighting to that in Vroom’s 1630 River Panorama in Schwerin (fig. a) and the trees to those in a drawing in Hamburg,21 and the 1638 Landscape with Waterfall, now in Haarlem (fig. b).22 The rendering of the rock-faced riverbank and distant hill in the Haarlem painting is also very similar to that in the Rijksmuseum picture. Collaborative evidence is the fact that Vroom is documented as having painted the landscape in Bor’s no longer extant Triumph of Venus, part of the decorations carried out for Frederik Hendrik’s Honselaarsdijk palace between 1636 and 1638.23 Vroom was also responsible for the landscape in a painting in Stockholm,24 the figures in which have on occasion been attributed to Bor.25 The Stockholm painting is, however, possibly the one mentioned in a number of 17th-century Haarlem inventories as a collaboration between Vroom and Jacob van Campen.26
The ultimate source for the composition of the landscape, which is blocked off on the left by trees and has a distant panoramic view, is Adam Elsheimer’s Aurora.27 However, Pieter de Grebber’s 1634 Finding of Moses.28 was probably the immediate model for the diagonal figural composition set against a screen of trees. De Grebber’s painting might also have inspired Bor’s combination of light blue and gold in the drapery worn by Pharaoh’s daughter. But unlike this potential model, she merely looks on in the present painting as her maids occupy themselves with the infant Moses. This approach to the subject, as well as the two maids with their naked backs to the viewer, were possibly derived from Moyses van Wtenbrouck’s handling of the subject (SK-A-4673). The women in Bor’s painting, with their fat cheeks and neckless bodies, all appear to be cast from the same mould. This bizarre figure type owes as much to Wtenbrouck as it does to Van Campen and De Grebber.
There is a possibility that Pharaoh’s Daughter Discovers Moses was originally owned by Constantijn Huygens and hung in his house on Plein in The Hague. A 1786 inventory of the contents of this house made after the death of Huygens’s great-granddaughter, Susanna Louisa Huygens (1714-85), includes a painting with this title, although unfortunately the names of the artists who executed it are not recorded. The painting had presumably remained in the house, which was passed down to Constantijn Huygens’s descendants in a quite convoluted manner.29 After the death of Susanna Louisa Huygens, the painting was, again presumably, sold with the house on Plein to Jacob Verheije van Citters and subsequently, in 1800, to Jonkheer Johannes Goldberg (1763-1828). An 1827 description of the house, in Goldberg’s possession at the time, mentions a Finding of Moses as an overdoor by Van Spreeuwen. The year after Goldberg’s death, the house was sold to the State. The painting was transferred to the Nederlandsch Museum voor Geschiedenis en Kunst in The Hague three years before Huygens’s house on Plein was demolished in 1877.
Significantly, the possible original owner of the painting, Constantijn Huygens, and the artists who executed it, Bor and Vroom, were involved in the Honselaarsdijk project, as were Van Campen and De Grebber, who were so influential for Bor.30 The years 1636-38, when that project was undertaken, give an indication for dating Bor’s painting. In his overview of Bor’s oeuvre, Von Moltke placed the painting at the end of the 1630s.31 Biesboer used the date of the completion of Huygens’s own house, 1637, as the probable date.32 Although his reasoning is difficult to follow, Keyes’s suggested date of about 1630 seems to be based on the date of Vroom’s landscape in Schwerin.33 However, Vroom’s Landscape with Waterfall in Haarlem, which has more in common with the Rijksmuseum painting, is from 1638. Bor’s four dated paintings also provide little indication as to how this collaborative work can be situated chronologically. The fully evolved classicism of the Pretiose, Don Juan and the Gypsy Woman Maiombe of 1641,34 does, at least, provide a terminus ante quem. Another indication is provided by the similarity between the long-haired figures and Bor’s single-figure depictions of women. These paintings are not dated, but it is known that Bor donated one of them to the Sint-Jobsgasthuis in Utrecht in 1631.35 However, because De Grebber’s Finding of Moses seems to have been one of Bor’s models, its date of 1634 can serve as a terminus post quem.
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. 25.
Lunsingh Scheurleer 1962, p. 182; Keyes 1975, II, p. 172, no. P 1; Von Moltke 1977, pp. 148, 149, 158, no. 2, with earlier literature; Biesboer 1979, p. 108; Nicolson 1979, p. 24; Nicolson/Vertova 1990, I, p. 66; Huiskamp in Amsterdam 1991b, pp. 231-32, no. 17; Van der Veen 1993, pp. 156-57
1903, p. 57, no. 567; 1934, p. 55, no. 567; 1960, p. 47, no. 567; 1976, p. 129, no. A 852; 2007, no. 25
J. Bikker, 2007, 'Paulus Bor and Cornelis Hendriksz. Vroom, Pharaoh’s Daughter Discovers Moses in the Rush Basket (Exodus 2:5-6), c. 1635 - c. 1638', in J. Bikker (ed.), Dutch Paintings of the Seventeenth Century in the Rijksmuseum, online coll. cat. Amsterdam: hdl.handle.net/10934/RM0001.COLLECT.6139
(accessed 28 December 2024 06:44:16).