Object data
black chalk, with grey wash; framing lines in pen and brown ink
height 150 mm × width 193 mm
Jacob Isaacksz van Ruisdael
Amsterdam, c. 1638 - c. 1655
black chalk, with grey wash; framing lines in pen and brown ink
height 150 mm × width 193 mm
inscribed: lower left, in brown ink (barely legible), J. Ruijsdael
inscribed on verso: lower centre, in an eighteenth- or nineteenth-century hand, in graphite, Klyne Haarlemmer Sluys / aande Martelaersgraft / het Schilderij behorende in ’t Kabinet v[…] Verstolk; lower centre, in pencil, 3; lower left, in an eighteenth- or nineteenth-century hand, in graphite, Hobbema f ; lower left, in pencil, DG; below that, in pencil, lrL-oo (?); below that, in pencil, 40 (?)
stamped on verso: lower left, with the mark of Wurfbain (L. 1556); centre, with the mark of the museum (L. 2228)
Watermark: Fragment, possibly of a coat of arms
Light foxing throughout
…; the ‘J. Ruisdael collector’;1 …; ? sale, Hendrik Busserus (1701-81, Amsterdam), Amsterdam (P. van der Schley et al.), 21 October 1782 sqq., Album 3, no. 163 (‘Een Gezigt van een Schutsluis te Amsterdam, fraay met zwart Kryt en Oostind. Inkt gewasschen, door J. Ruisdaal.’), fl. 18, to ‘V.d. Werff’;2 …; collection Jacobus Willem Wurfbain (1816-88), Amsterdam (L. 1556); his sale, Amsterdam (F. Muller), 20 November 1899 sqq., no. 134, as Meindert Hobbema, fl. 240, to the dealer H.J. Valk, Amsterdam;3 from whom, fl. 276, to the museum (L. 2228), 1899
Object number: RP-T-1899-A-4205
Copyright: Public domain
Jacob Isaacksz van Ruisdael (Haarlem 1628/29 - Amsterdam 1682)
He was the only son of the Mennonite framemaker, art dealer and landscape painter Isaack Jacobsz Ruisdael (1599-1677). As stated in Jacob’s will of 27 May 1667, he was born in Haarlem. A notarized document of 9 June 1661, in which he declares himself to be thirty-two years old, puts his birthdate at 1628 or 1629. Although there is no documentary evidence, it is likely that Jacob trained with his father and, possibly, with his uncle Salomon van Ruysdael (c. 1600/03-1670). Be that as it may, the refined landscapes of Cornelis Hendriksz Vroom (c. 1590/92-1661) had a far more profound impact on Jacob’s early work, the earliest dated examples of which are from 1646. According to the records of the Haarlem painters’ guild, Jacob was enrolled in 1648. Houbraken claimed that Jacob also practiced medicine. In fact, a ‘Jacobus Ruijsdael’ appears on a list of Amsterdam doctors in the Amsterdam Stadsarchief, stating that a medical degree was conferred on him at the university of Caen, northern France, on 15 October 1676. This, however, is unlikely to be the artist. Houbraken was probably correct when he wrote that Nicolaes Berchem (1621/22-1683) and Ruisdael were good friends. It is generally assumed they travelled together to Bentheim in Westphalia just across the border around 1650. It is likely that Ruisdael settled in Amsterdam circa 1655, when Meindert Hobbema (1638-1709) became his pupil there, according to a notarized document of 8 July 1660. A Mennonite just like his father, Jacob had himself baptized on 17 June 1657 in Ankeveen, a village near Utrecht. At this time he was living in Amsterdam in a house called ‘In de Silvere Trompete’ on the Rokin from the Dam to the Kromme Elleboogsteeg. On 15 January 1659, Jacob became a citizen of Amsterdam. When the artist drew up his will in 1667, he was living on the Kalverstraat, but from 1670 he was a subtenant of the third house on the south side of the Dam, seen from the Rokin, living above the book and art shop ‘De Wackeren Hond’, owned by the publisher Hieronymus Sweerts (1629-1696). Members of the wealthy Amsterdam patrician family De Graeff were clients of Jacob, as is attested by various archival sources. The Arrival of Cornelis de Graeff and his Family at his Country Estate Soestdijk, in the National Gallery of Ireland, Dublin (inv. no. NGI.287),4 which was painted in collaboration with Thomas de Keyser (1596-1667), for instance, was certainly one such commission. Although Ruisdael’s paintings were given modest valuations in the few inventories made during his lifetime, his financial situation seems to have been stable enough throughout his career for him to be able, for instance in 1678, to lend 400 guilders to the Amsterdam doctor Johannes Baptist van Lamsweerde (active 1677-78). In 1674, Jacob’s assets were estimated, for tax purposes, at 2,000 guilders. He died a lifelong bachelor in 1682 and was buried on 14 March in the Grote Kerk, Haarlem, the city to which he presumably had returned shortly before his death.
Ruisdael left an impressive oeuvre of some 800 paintings, around 140 drawings and a tiny corpus of 13 etchings. Dated works are rather unevenly distributed over his career, creating uncertainty over his precise development. His last five dated paintings are from the 1660s, but in every case the last digit is illegible. Ruisdael was, no doubt, the most versatile landscapist of the Dutch Golden Age. His oeuvre includes city- and seascapes, coastal and panoramic scenes, wooded and winter landscapes, grain fields, Scandinavian landscapes and landscape views centring on an array of motifs such as hills, mountains, bridges, ruined structures, water and wind mills, cemeteries, castles, cottages, sluices, torrents and waterfalls. Ruisdael frequently employed colleagues to add staffage to his landscape views, among them Berchem, Johannes Lingelbach (1622-1674), Gerrit Lundens (1622-1686), Adriaen van de Velde (1636-1672) and Philips Wouwerman (1619-1668). Besides Vroom, the only other artist who exerted a recognizable and sustained influence over Ruisdael was Allaert van Everdingen (1621-1675). In turn, Ruisdael himself had a decisive impact on a host of landscape specialists, including Hobbema, Roelof Jansz van Vries (c. 1630/31-after 1681), Cornelis Gerritsz Decker (?-1678), Klaes Molenaer (c. 1626/29-1676) and Jan van Kessel (1641-1680), to mention just a few.
Eddy Schavemaker, 2019
References
A. Houbraken, De groote schouburgh der Nederlantsche konstschilders en schilderessen, 3 vols., Amsterdam 1718-21, III (1721), pp. 65-66; H.F. Wijnman, ‘Het leven der Ruysdaels’, Oud Holland 49 (1932), pp. 49-60; K.E. Simon, ‘Jacob Isaackzoon van Ruisdael’, in U. Thieme and F. Becker, Allgemeines Lexikon der bildenden Künstler von der Antike bis zur Gegenwart, 37 vols., Leipzig 1907-50, XXIX (1935), pp. 190-93; F.W.H. Hollstein et al., Dutch and Flemish Etchings, Engravings and Woodcuts, c. 1450-1700, 72 vols., Amsterdam and elsewhere 1947-2010, XX (1978); J. Giltaij, ‘De tekeningen van Jacob van Ruisdael’, Oud Holland 94 (1980), nos. 2/3, pp. 141-208; S. Slive, Jacob van Ruisdael: A Complete Catalogue of his Paintings, Drawings and Etchings, New Haven 2001, with earlier literature; I. van Thiel-Stroman, ‘Biographies 15th-17th century’, in P.N. Köhler (ed.), Painting in Haarlem 1500-1850: The Collection of the Frans Hals Museum, coll. cat. Haarlem 2006, pp. 281-86; J.P. Hinrichs, ‘Nogmaals over een oud raadsel. Jacob van Ruisdael, Arnold Houbraken en de Amsterdamse naamlijst van geneesheren’, Oud Holland 126 (2013), no. 1, pp. 58-62; T. van der Molen, ‘Ruisdael, Jacob van’, in A. Beyer et al. (eds.), Allgemeines Künstlerlexikon: Die bildenden Künstler aller Zeiten und Völker, Munich 1992-, C (2018), p. 116
This lively sketch shows the Oude Haarlemmersluis (Old Haarlem Lock) with carved reliefs on the brick abutments on the left and right sides of the bridge over the lock gates and the Martelaarsgracht (a wide canal that once flowed out to the IJ, but is now filled in). Under the bridge are the doors of the sluice, and beyond that are buildings at the junction of the Nieuwezijds Voorburg and the Nieuwezijds Achterburgwal (now called the Spuistraat); to the left and right of the sluice are stairs leading from the quay down to the water (of which only those on the left side are visible). The scene is depicted in bright daylight, which is reflected in the calm water and casts prominent shadows over the house and stairs at left.
The compiler of the 1899 Wurfbain sale correctly identified the site, but misattributed the drawing to Ruisdael’s pupil Meindert Hobbema (1638-1709) and erroneously related it to Hobbema’s painting of the (new) Haarlemmersluis with the Haringpakkerstoren, now in the National Gallery, London (inv. no. 6138).5 It was probably that painting, which once belonged to Baron Johan Gijsbert Verstolk van Soelen (1776-1845) of The Hague and Soelen, near Tiel, that is alluded to in the eighteenth- or nineteenth-century inscription on the verso of the present sheet.6
With the exception of Hind (1926), who favoured an attribution to Ruisdael, the drawing continued to be classified as by Hobbema for nearly a century, until 1980, when Giltaij correctly grouped it with three other similar-sized, black chalk sketches of Amsterdam by Ruisdael (some with grey wash), all dating from shortly after 1655.7 One drawing, the Landscape with the Heiligewegspoort, Amsterdam, from the Van Eeghen collection, is in the Stadsarchief, Amsterdam (inv. no. 10055/32),8 while the other two are in the Louvre, Paris: the View of the Montelbaanstoren, Amsterdam (still classified as Hobbema in the collection of Edmond de Rothschild, inv. no. 3532 DR),9 and the Wooden Tower and Houses on the Bank of a River, Probably the Amstel (inv. no. RF 705).10 In contrast to the Rijksmuseum drawing, the views of the Heiligewegspoort and the Montelbaanstoren are not topographically accurate.
Giltaij noted that the brown ink inscription with the name J. Ruijsdael, written by an unknown early dealer or collector at lower left of the Rijksmuseum sheet, likewise occurs on other Amsterdam cityscapes, such as the Louvre’s View of the Montelbaanstoren, Amsterdam.11 According to Broos, the inscriptions from this collector – christened the ‘J. Ruisdael collector’ by Slive – must have been done between 1682 (the year of Ruisdael’s death) and 1690, when the annotated drawings were in the Feitama collection; after that, their provenances diverged and the sheets were never again in the same collection.12 It is worth noting that this is the period in which Dirk Dalens (1659-1688) is thought to have had access to drawings from Ruisdael’s estate.
Slive called attention to what he believed to be crude, black chalk drawing of a related lock subject wrongly attributed to Ruisdael, apparently signed R and dated 1646, which was once owned by A.C.R. Dreesmann (1854-1934), Laren, and which appeared on the Amsterdam art market in 1955, again in 1968, and more recently in London in 2002.13
Ingrid Oud, 2000/Jane Shoaf Turner, 2019
E.W. Moes, Oude teekeningen van de Hollandsche en Vlaamsche school in het Rijksprentenkabinet te Amsterdam, 2 vols., coll. cat. Amsterdam 1904-06, I, no. 45 (as Hobbema); A.M. Hind, Catalogue of Drawings by Dutch and Flemish Artists Preserved in the Department of Prints and Drawings in the British Museum, 5 vols., coll. cat. London 1915-32, III (1926), p. 117; Hollandsche teekenkunst in de Gouden Eeuw, exh. cat. Amsterdam (Rijksprentenkabinet) 1935, no. 132 (as Hobbema); G. Broulhiet, Meindert Hobbema, Paris 1938, no. 492 (as Hobbema); K.E. Simon, ‘Review of G. Broulhiet, Meindert Hobbema, Paris, 1938’, Zeitschrift für Kunstgeschichte 9 (1940), p. 209 (as Hobbema); I.H. van Eeghen, ‘Een stadsgezicht van Hobbema’, Oud Holland 68 (1953), no. 2, pp. 120-21 (as Hobbema); H.E. van Gelder, Holland by Dutch Artists in Paintings, Drawings, Woodcuts, Engravings and Etchings, Amsterdam 1959, p. 30 (fig. 96a; as Hobbema); K.G. Boon and L.C.J. Frerichs, Hollandse tekeningen uit de Gouden Eeuw. Keuze uit openbare en particuliere Nederlandse verzamelingen, exh. cat. Brussels (Koninklijke Bibliotheek Albert I)/Amsterdam (Rijksmuseum)/Hamburg (Hamburger Kunsthalle) 1961, p. 145, under no. 148 (as a late work by Hobbema); H. Wagner, Jan van der Heyden (1637-1712), Amsterdam/Haarlem 1971, p. 70, under no. 15 (as Hobbema, with similarities to the museum’s painting of the same site by Jan van der Heyden [1637-1712], inv. no. SK-A-154); J. Giltaij, ‘De tekeningen van Jacob van Ruisdael’, Oud Holland 94 (1980), nos. 2/3, no. 7; S. Slive, ‘Additions to Jacob van Ruisdael’, The Burlington Magazine 133 (1991), p. 603 (n. 23); W.W. Robinson, Seventeenth-century Dutch Drawings: A Selection from the Maida and George Abrams Collection, exh. cat. Amsterdam (Rijksprentenkabinet)/Vienna (Graphische Sammlung Albertina)/New York (Pierpont Morgan Library)/Cambridge (MA) (Fogg Art Museum), p. 94, under no. 38 (n. 8); S. Slive, Jacob van Ruisdael: A Complete Catalogue of his Paintings, Drawings and Etchings, New Haven 2001, no. D2
I. Oud, 2000/J. Shoaf Turner, 2019, 'Jacob Isaacksz van Ruisdael, The Oude Haarlemmersluis (Old Haarlem Lock) on the Martelaarsgracht, Amsterdam, Amsterdam, c. 1638 - c. 1655', in J. Turner (ed.), Dutch Drawings of the Seventeenth Century in the Rijksmuseum, online coll. cat. Amsterdam: hdl.handle.net/10934/RM0001.COLLECT.59774
(accessed 10 November 2024 04:38:34).