Object data
oil on canvas
support: height 65.5 cm × width 110 cm
frame size: depth 6 cm
Reinier Nooms
Amsterdam, Amsterdam, 1662 - 1668
oil on canvas
support: height 65.5 cm × width 110 cm
frame size: depth 6 cm
...; Admiraliteit van Amsterdam (Admiralty of Amsterdam);1 transferred from the Ministerie van Marine (Department of the Navy), The Hague, to the museum, 1883
Object number: SK-A-1396
Copyright: Public domain
View of a harbour with town and ships, seen from the sea. One of the ships has been identified as De Ruyter’s vessel De Liefde.
The Amsterdam Admiralty commissioned Reinier Nooms to make four paintings (this painting and SK-A-1397, SK-A-1398 and SK-A-1399) after peace with Algiers and other North African states was achieved in 1662. It is thought that they were intended as a present for Michiel Adriaensz de Ruyter, but instead they remained with the Amsterdam Admiralty. In 1663, the Amsterdam-based captain Joris de Caulery received a chain worth a hundred silver ducats from the Staten Generaal in return for his present of these four paintings made by Nooms.2
J.M. Obreen, Catalogus der verzameling modellen van het Departement van Marine, The Hague 1858, p. 173; P.J.J. van Thiel et al., All the Paintings of the Rijksmuseum in Amsterdam: A Completely Illustrated Catalogue, coll. cat. Amsterdam 1976, p. 419; R. van Gelder and J. van der Waals, Een wereldreiziger op papier. De atlas van Laurens van der Hem (1621-1678), Amsterdam/Gent 1992, pp. 114-15, nos. IV,11 and IV,13; K. Bejjit, ‘Merchants, Diplomats, and Corsairs: The Dutch in Barbary in De Ruyter’s Time’, in J.R. Bruijn et al. (eds.), De Ruyter: Dutch Admiral, Rotterdam 2011, pp. 57-75
J. van der Vliet, 2016, 'Reinier Nooms, View of Algiers, Amsterdam, 1662 - 1668', in J. van der Vliet and A. Lemmers (eds.), Navy Models in the Rijksmuseum, online coll. cat. Amsterdam: hdl.handle.net/10934/RM0001.COLLECT.7367
(accessed 23 November 2024 16:23:30).