Object data
oil on canvas
support: height 108 cm × width 88.7 cm
Caesar van Everdingen
1671
oil on canvas
support: height 108 cm × width 88.7 cm
Support The plain-weave canvas has been wax-resin lined. All tacking edges have been trimmed slightly. Shallow cusping at intervals with a range of approx. 10-12 cm is present at the bottom and on the right. Judging by the crack pattern parallel to the edges, the bars of the original strainer were 6 cm wide. At the top and bottom and on the left the picture plane is folded over the current stretcher, reducing the original height of the composition by approx. 2.5 cm and the width by approx. 1 cm.
Preparatory layers The single, thin, coarse, tan-orange ground extends over the original tacking edges on all sides and up to the trimmed edges of the canvas at the top and bottom. It consists of large, white pigment particles, black pigment, occasional large, dark red pigment particles and a great deal of orangey earth-coloured pigment.
Underdrawing No underdrawing could be detected with the naked eye, infrared photography or infrared reflectography.
Paint layers The paint extends up to the original tacking edges on all sides. The composition was built up from the back to the front and from dark to light, carefully reserving the figure and hair. An undermodelling with a thin, brown wash is still visible in places, for instance beneath the hair and in the shaded parts of the face. An occasional earth red forms a glowing mid-tone adjacent to the darkest undermodelling, as seen in the shadow along the bridge of the nose by the inner corner of Willem Baert’s left eye. A cool, light optical grey was created where the carefully blended, light flesh tones cover the dark undermodelling, as can be seen on the jaw of the lit side of the face. A cool scumble along the sitter’s left jaw catches a secondary reflection of light from the collar. The reserves were not followed everywhere. To the right of the head, for example, a dark, wide reserve can be made out with the naked eye and infrared reflectography, and it also appears as if Baert’s left hand was planned further to the left. A darker paint covers the thin brushwork of the initial background in the unlit passages, giving solidity to the darks. The second background layer must have been applied after the figure was complete, as this slightly overlaps it everywhere, except for the final light grey, yellow and dark brown strands of hair and a few parts of the glove. Some slight adjustments to the contours were made, most importantly to Baert’s right thumb, the form of which was corrected with the black paint of the cloak. Finally, transparent deep brown glazes were used to emphasize and intensify the shadows formed by the undermodelling, as seen in the shadow along the fingers and back of the sitter’s right hand. Fine, reddish-brown strokes create a few scant beard hairs, and mark the division of the lit jawline from the collar.
Gwen Tauber, 2024
Fair. A piece of the original softwood strainer is attached to the current stretcher. There are numerous pinhole losses in the flesh as well as discrete, yet discoloured retouchings. There is local abrasion in the hair.
For both the present painting (SK-A-1339) and its pendant (SK-A-1340)
…; sale, Jan Hendrick Cremer (1813-1885, Arnhem and Ixelles), Amsterdam (F. Muller et al.), 26 October 1886, no. 23, fl. 345, to the museum1
Object number: SK-A-1339
Copyright: Public domain
Caesar van Everdingen (Alkmaar 1616/17 - Alkmaar 1678)
Caesar van Everdingen’s year of birth has been deduced from statements of his age in two documents. He was the eldest son born of the second marriage of the Alkmaar notary and attorney Pieter van Everdingen to the town midwife Aechje Claesdr Moer. Since Van Everdingen was already recorded as a painter’s apprentice in Alkmaar in 1628, when he was around 12, he was probably training with a local artist, possibly Claes Jacobsz van der Heck. In 1632, barely 16 years old, he became a member of the Guild of St Luke, which Van der Heck had helped to establish. His earliest dated pictures are two companion portraits of his father and mother from 1636.2 According to Houbraken, he was also taught by the Utrecht artist Jan van Bronckhorst, and the latter’s influence is indeed noticeable in some of Van Everdingen’s earliest paintings. He might have rounded off his studies with him in Utrecht around 1639, as well as with Jan van Bijlert.
In 1641 Van Everdingen was awarded the prestigious commission for a group portrait of the officers of Alkmaar’s Old Civic Guard.3 From 1641 to 1644 he was involved in a major project that probably came his way through the architect and artist Jacob van Campen. It was to paint the shutters of the new organ for the Grote Kerk in Alkmaar, for which he received 2,150 guilders. He carried out preparatory work for it on a scale model of the instrument in 1642-43 under the supervision of Van Campen, at whose country house near Amersfoort, Huis Beekhoven in Randenbroek, he lived for a year and a half. Van Everdingen may have gone on a trip to France in the months leading up to his wedding to Helena van Oosthoorn at the end of 1646. Shortly afterwards he was invited to contribute five paintings for the decoration of the Oranjezaal (Orange Hall) in Amalia van Solms’s newly built residence Huis ten Bosch in The Hague, for which he was paid 2,700 guilders. It was probably in connection with that commission that he moved to Haarlem at the end of 1647 or early 1648, becoming a member of its Old Civic Guard in the latter year. He probably lodged with his younger brother, the landscapist Allaert van Everdingen. It was only in 1651 that he registered with the city’s Guild of St Luke, which he later served in various official functions. After his relocation to Haarlem he was asked to produce two group portraits of the Alkmaar Young and Old Civic Guards, both of which he finished in 1657.4 There are various documents that show that Van Everdingen was living in Amsterdam in 1661, but the following year he and his wife were back in Alkmaar, when he was paid for a picture for the renovated Prinsenzaal (Princes’ Hall) in its Town Hall.5 His last dated works are two pendant portraits of Willem Baert and Elisabeth Kessels of 1671.6 However, there is documentary evidence that Van Everdingen painted a likeness of Wollebrand Geleynsz de Jongh in 1674.7 The artist died in 1678 and was buried in the Grote Kerk in Alkmaar on 13 October.
Van Everdingen was comfortably off all his life, and regularly lent money to various people in the 1650s and later. Oddly enough, no writers praised him while he was alive. Houbraken lists his pupils as his brother-in-law Laurens van Oosthoorn (?-1680), Hendrik Graauw (c. 1627-1693), Arien Warmenhuyzen (dates unknown) and Adriaan Dekker (dates unknown). Thomas Heeremans (1641-1695) is also occasionally mentioned as his apprentice. With the exception of a single drawn preliminary study, all of Van Everdingen’s works are either paintings or painted interior pieces, mainly histories and portraits. Exceptions to these genres are two still lifes and the decoration of a model ship. His painted oeuvre runs to 67 pictures, all of them meticulously and smoothly executed, with his hallmark of a chiaroscuro with gentle transitions from light to dark. He convincingly imitated the texture of the materials of his draperies and clothing. Van Everdingen is regarded as a classicist, and although he did idealize the bodies of his figures, their faces are often very portrait-like.
Eddy Schavemaker, 2024
References
A. Houbraken, De groote schouburgh der Nederlantsche konstschilders en schilderessen, II, Amsterdam 1719, p. 94; A. van der Willigen, Geschiedkundige aanteekeningen over Haarlemsche schilders en andere beoefenaren van de beeldende kunsten, voorafgegaan door eene korte geschiedenis van het schilders- of St. Lucas Gild aldaar, Haarlem 1866, pp. 107-08; C.W. Bruinvis, ‘De Van Everdingens’, Oud Holland 17 (1899), pp. 216-22; Plietzsch in U. Thieme and F. Becker (eds.), Allgemeines Lexikon der bildenden Künstler von der Antike bis zur Gegenwart, XI, Leipzig 1915, p. 107; N.J.M. Dresch, ‘Caesar van Everdingen’s nalatenschap’, Oud Holland 52 (1935), pp. 41-48; P. Huys Janssen, Caesar van Everdingen 1616/17-1678: Monograph and Catalogue Raisonné, Doornspijk 2002, pp. 25-56, 153-92 (documents); Huys Janssen in Saur Allgemeines Künstlerlexikon: Die Bildenden Künstler aller Zeiten und Völker, XXXV, Munich/Leipzig 2003, p. 406; I. van Thiel-Stroman, ‘Biographies 15th-17th Century’, in P. Biesboer et al., Painting in Haarlem 1500-1850: The Collection of the Frans Hals Museum, coll. cat. Haarlem 2006, pp. 99-363, esp. pp. 151-53; C. Klinkert and Y. Bleyerveld (eds.), Painting Beauty: Caesar van Everdingen (1616/1617-1678), exh. cat. Alkmaar (Stedelijk Museum)/Helsinki (Finnish National Gallery) 2016-17
The identities of this man and the woman in the pendant portrait (SK-A-1340; also fig. a), shown standing at almost knee-length, were unknown when the museum acquired the paintings in 1886. It was Moes who discovered who the couple were and listed Willem Baert and Elisabeth Kessels around 1903 in his personal, annotated copy of Iconographia Batava, which is now in the Rijksmuseum.8 The 1904 collection catalogue was the first publication to announce the sitter’s names to the world. Their families were prominent in Alkmaar. Willem Baert was the son of Jacob Cornelisz Baert, who had been depicted by Caesar van Everdingen back in 1657 as captain of the Orange company of the Old Civic Guard in the group portrait of its officers and standard-bearers.9 On 21 July 1658 Willem married his cousin Elisabeth Kessels, daughter of Pieter Willemsz Kessels. The latter’s sister Catharina was the wife of Jacob Baert and Willem’s mother. Both Jacob Baert and Pieter Kessels combined a variety of official functions in the town, such as councillor, alderman and burgomaster, with membership of the region’s polder board.
Willem Baert followed a similar career path in Alkmaar, being successively an alderman (1665-71), councillor (1671-84) and burgomaster (1676-84) and, like his father, captain of the Old Civic Guard’s Orange company (1668).10 He was also a member of the Heerhugowaard and Zijpe polder boards, and secretary and treasurer of the Board of the Drainage Locks of Kennemerland and West Friesland. Willem and Elisabeth had 11 children, most of whom died young. The family lived on Langestraat in Alkmaar, one of the main streets, where the Town Hall also stood, and had a country estate north-east of the city on the site now occupied by the village of Burgerbrug. It is very possible that their formal portraits were commissioned to mark Willem Baert’s election as councillor in April 1671.11 All but one of the identified sitters in Van Everdingen’s pictures are citizens of Alkmaar. They probably knew each other well as part of the close-knit network of the local elite. Willem Baert, for example, was the executor of the will of Wollebrand Geleynsz de Jongh, who asked Van Everdingen to paint his likeness in 1674.12
Van Everdingen’s 26 extant portraits are distinguished by their high quality of execution and their great variety. In addition to civic guard pieces there are pastoral scenes and a portrait historié. Pendant likenesses as those of Willem Baert and Elisabeth Kessels are of a traditional type that was widespread throughout the Netherlands. The earliest other examples in the artist’s oeuvre are the ones of his parents from 1636.13 Two more such companion pieces of a married couple depict Cornelis Jacobsz Groot and a yet unidentified woman, dated 1656 and 1664 respectively,14 and there is also an anonymous pair that can be ascribed to around 1660.15 The busts of Maria van Steenhuijsen of 1646 and Johan van Nordingen de Jonge of 1648 make a slightly less formal impression due to the greater liveliness of their hand gestures.16
In keeping with the stately nature of their portraits, both sitters are wearing costly attire. Apart from his flat starched collar and short cuffs, Willem Baert is clad in plain black. He has draped a cloak around his waist and left arm, and holds the stylish attribute of a glove in his hand. Elisabeth Kessels is wearing a black bodice with short, puffed sleeves, which is decorated with a wide collar and bands of lace, and her toilet is completed with jewellery set with diamonds. She is holding a fan, an accessory comparable to her husband’s glove as a status symbol.
The style of the two paintings is in line with Haarlem portraiture of the 1640s and ’50s, which was dominated by Frans Hals and Johannes Verspronck. The element that Van Everdingen added to his likenesses was a sense of grandeur. During his work on the organ shutters for Alkmaar’s Grote Kerk in 1641-44,17 he experimented at length with a low vantage point, and he evidently found the resulting monumental effect widely applicable. The stately look of both portraits is strengthened by the plain backgrounds.
Eddy Schavemaker, 2024
See Key to abbreviations, Rijksmuseum painting catalogues and Acknowledgements
For both the present painting (SK-A-1339) and its pendant (SK-A-1340)
P. Huys Janssen, Caesar van Everdingen 1616/17-1678: Monograph and Catalogue Raisonné, Doornspijk 2002, pp. 15, 52, 76, 80-81, 108, 125, nos. 22-23, with earlier literature; Huys Janssen in C. Klinkert and Y. Bleyerveld (eds.), Painting Beauty: Caesar van Everdingen (1616/1617-1678), exh. cat. Alkmaar (Stedelijk Museum)/Helsinki (Finnish National Gallery) 2016-17, pp. 191-94, nos. 33a-b
1886, p. 44, no. 352 (as Portrait of a Man); 1903, p. 97, no. 911 (as Portrait of a Man); 1934, p. 97, no. 911; 1960, p. 97, no. 911; 1976, p. 222, no. A 1339
Eddy Schavemaker, 2024, 'Caesar Boëtius van Everdingen, Portrait of Willem Jacobsz Baert (1636-1684), Burgomaster of Alkmaar, 1671', in J. Bikker (ed.), Dutch Paintings of the Seventeenth Century in the Rijksmuseum, online coll. cat. Amsterdam: hdl.handle.net/10934/RM0001.COLLECT.8397
(accessed 21 November 2024 23:27:57).